Sunday, 16 March 2025

Scratch-Built Moon Truck


 


Once again, I've been trying to use up some of the many bits that I've accumulated for excellent projects that never quite came to fruition. 

A little while ago I made an ork battlewagon, which looks like this:




In doing so, I bought a resin battlewagon from Ebay, which I'd intended to use as the basis for the battlewagon itself. I ended up only using the wheels for my version, which left me with a load of resin bits including a body that looked like a massive lump of white chocolate.

Also in the bits box were two, er, side pieces from a Ramshackle Games APC-type vehicle. I have no idea why I own these, especially since I had three of them. Maybe I over-ordered many years ago? I also had no wheels to go with them. Genius. However, I discovered that the side bits fitted the white-chocolate resin bit really well. 

I boxed in the rear of the vehicle with plasticard and then got to work covering it in greebles - that is, bits of interesting, superfluous detail. Many GW human vehicles have plates on them, which sometimes have little gaps between them. I tried to simulate this with different shapes and thicknesses of plasticard. 






The underside shows how the large random lumps of resin went together.




Further greebling occurred.





The bits came from all sorts of places: some Warlord Games turrets from an armoured car; two ventilation units made by TT Combat; a Mantic gun - anything that looked interesting and vaguely industrial, really. My favourite bit is a toolbox from a Gaslands sprue. I considered buying some resin wheels, but I'm cheap, so I got some Lego ones off ebay. And they worked surprisingly well!

The thing I ended up with looked like a cross between a military truck and a moon rover. It clearly needed an industrial paint job. I went with a light grey, because you can do a lot of weathering on that. For the first time, I used an oil wash to simulate dirt and grime: I used burnt umber from Windsor and Newton, watered down with white spirit. To be honest, while this was a bit better than just painting the dirt on, I didn't think that it was amazing.

Headlights, an abandoned toolbox and some kind of tube added a bit of colour to the model. Overall, I think it might be a bit over-weathered, and you can see that the tyres say "Lego" if you look closely, but I think it's come out pretty well given how it started. A weekend well spent!









12 comments:

  1. Fantastic scratch build!

    It would fit right in any frontier setting and looks suitably battered and grubby!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks! I'm pleased with it, but I do want to paint something clean and brightly-coloured now!

      Delete
    2. Your Eldar stuff has been really nice and clean! I've seen a few folks paint theirs to look grimdark but it just doesn't work in my opinion as I just can't imagine a space Elf allowing itself to get grubby!

      Do you play any games at present as I'd love to know what rules you may using and it would be ace to see your figures set up in battle!

      Delete
    3. I think the eldar really look best if they're shiny and clean. I reckon their technology would be dirt-resistant!

      I don't play anything at the moment, not regularly, but I'd like to get back into playing the right sort of games in the right way. I've got a friend who wants to get back into gaming, but he only seems to like fantasy games!

      Delete
  2. This is most excellent! I really appreciate these scratch built projects and enjoy seeing such beauties. Well done!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks very much! It was very fiddly to build but I think all the extra detailing does pay off. Of course, I'm still in awe of your ork gargant!

      Delete
  3. I totally agree with Suber. Scratchbuilding is the basis of any oldhammer vehicle creator. I love yours.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you! I really enjoy the scratchbuilding. It's very satisfying when it works!

      Delete
  4. Very cool use of accumulated bitz. Although, now I wonder what it was made to carry... some sort of treasure that needs an armored vehicle? Space oxygen generator? Miners in shoddy armored space suits?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Cheers, I knew those bits would come in useful someday! I reckon it could carry some big mysterious boxes, perhaps under tarpaulins. Or maybe a band of rebels?

      Delete
  5. Totally my favourite kind of vehicle - beaten up and utilitarian with loads of weathering and character. Brilliant scratch-build.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks very much! I might try another once I've found enough bits and bobs!

      Delete