New Releases For July 2014 -- The Great War 1914-1918 (2 Viewers)

jjDesigns

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THE GREAT WAR 1914-1918

The British Mark V tank was an upgraded version of the Mark IV tank, deployed in 1918 and used in action in the closing months of World War I. Thanks to Walter Wilson's epicyclic gear steering system, it was the first British heavy tank that required only one man to steer it; the gearsmen needed in earlier Marks were thus released to man the armament.
The Mark V was first used in the Battle of Hamel on 4 July 1918, when 60 tanks contributed to a successful assault by Australian units on the German lines. It went on to take part in eight major offensives before the end of the War.
Canadian and American troops trained on Mk Vs in England in 1918, and the American Heavy Tank Battalion (the 301st) took part in three actions on the British Sector of the Western Front in late 1918.
During the Battle of Amiens in August 1918, 288 Mark V tanks, along with the new Whippet and Mk V*, penetrated the German lines in a foretaste of modern armoured warfare.

At the Battle of Amiens, B Company was organised into 5 sections, of 4 tanks each.
Three tanks per section were in front or alongside the first infantry wave. One tank would be in reserve.
At least one of these tanks in the front section would be a “COMPOSITE” variant of the Mark V.

The “Hemaphrodite”, or “Composite” version of the Mark V tank, consisted of a “Male”, heavy gun on one side of the tank, and “Female” machine gun variant on the other side of the tank.

For those collectors who could not make up their minds whether to purchase the “Male” or the “female”……. This is the answer!


GWB07.JPG

GWB-07
THE GREAT WAR,1914-1918 BATTLE OF AMIENS, 6th August 1918,
10th BATTALION, III CORPS, MARK V, COMPOSITE VERSION, J18, 9435,

(2pcs)

(BoxSize 13 ½” x 9 ½” x 6”)
Model Size 10 ¾”x 7 ½” x 4 ¾”
Model Weight 1,158g


GWB07a.JPG



GWB07b.JPG

Battle History Sheets in PRO WO 95-103
J18 was unable to keep direction in the mist so went to the Bray Corbie Road and proceeded along it to k13d.7.0 where it encountered considerable hostile MG fire from south of the road. Tank went to K20a.7.65 [?] where it left the road and patrolled about k20a.7.9, k9d, k16a and k15d. Tank was hit by an AT bullet which set off a 6pdr round and broke the rum ration. Many MGs fired on the tank, at least six were run over, the Hotchkiss guns kept jamming and this allowed parties of enemy to escape into the mist. At 9.30am mist cleared but further enemy MGs could not be located, the tanks were under heavy shellfire so they rallied.


GWB07PIC.JPG

THE GREAT WAR 1914-1918 Releases to be continued............................
 
** PLEASE NOTE, The first of the Australian Infantry which were previewed at the London Toy Soldier show will be released next month.**


View attachment 154366

GWB-24
THE GREAT WAR,1914-1918, BATTLE OF AMIENS, 6th August 1918, 58th 2/1st LONDON DIVISION, 2 Tommy Tank Riders,

(4pcs)


**PLEASE NOTE, this set has the bases separate, so the figures can be displayed on one of the British Tanks, or as normal amongst other figures.**


GWB24aa.jpg


GWB24ba.jpg

The French army was manned by conscription , and every 20 year old male was liable for three years’ service. Most men would go into the infantry, and these were men primarily from an agricultural background, with those who had worked on railways, public works, shipyards and telecommunications going into the artillery.
Infantry Regiments were created on a local basis, similar to the British Pals battalions.
The peacetime army had a strength of 817,000 men, augmented on mobilization to 2,944,000.
During the war 7,800,000 men served with the “colours”, about 80% of the population of men eligible to fight.
Water was scarce in the front line, and the growing of facial hair led to the nickname “Poilu” (hairy one). The traditional nickname of the infantry was “Les Biffins” (the rag and bone men), initially to each other they were “Les bonhommes” (the lads), or as the war drew out, “Les pauvres cons du front” PCDF, (the poor bastards at the front).

GWF23.JPG

GWF-23
THE GREAT WAR,1914-1918, FRENCH INFANTRY 1917-1918, 123e Regiment of Infantry, 2 x PCDF Walking,

(2 pcs)


To be continued................................
 
KNIGHTS OF THE SKIES

Two more mechanics, which can be used alongside last months BGC-17, helping to move an allied plane into cover.

BGC18.JPG

BGC-18
KNIGHTS OF THE SKIES, 2 x Mechanics, Pushing and Pulling,

(2pcs)


BGC17PIC.JPG


Chaplains are the only British Army officers who do not carry standard officer ranks. They are officially designated Chaplain to the Forces (CF) (e.g. "The Reverend John Smith CF"). They do, however, have grades which equate to the standard ranks and wear the insignia of the equivalent rank. Chaplains are usually addressed as "Padre", never by their nominal military rank.
They are unique within the British Army in that they do not carry arms. At services on formal occasions, chaplains wear their medals and decorations on their clerical robes (many chaplains have been decorated for bravery in action, including three Victoria Crosses: James Adams, Noel Mellish and William Addison)
During the First World War some 4,400 Army Chaplains were recruited and 179 lost their lives on active service


BGC20.JPG

BGC-20
KNIGHTS OF THE SKIES, ROYAL ARMY CHAPLAINS’ DEPARTMENT, CHAPLIN TO THE FORCES, CAPTAIN,

(1pc)
 
All very nice . . . . . Great idea to have removable bases for the GWB-24 Tommies . . . I'll be putting everything on my want list . . . . Still trying to catch up on previous releases . . . .
:smile2: Mike
 
Great stuff. Great tank, and tank riders. Great new Poilu. VERY nice Great War releases. Can't wait for the coming UK infantry releases. -- Al
 
KNIGHTS OF THE SKIES

Two more mechanics, which can be used alongside last months BGC-17, helping to move an allied plane into cover.

View attachment 154373

BGC-18
KNIGHTS OF THE SKIES, 2 x Mechanics, Pushing and Pulling,

(2pcs)


View attachment 154374

Looking at the pic directly above, it appears as though JJD has two more "pushers" in the can (so to speak). While I've been a big supporter of the ground crew figures, said additions will come awfully close to placing the blue-clad figures at the toy soldier saturation-point. At least that's possibly true for those among us who have collected ALL the KotS pieces. I'd really like to see Jenkins do some figures for the other air services, like those of the USA and France. Gotta have the padre, BTW. In the absence of a properly equipped bar...and women, he's all the solace that my flyboys can count on.

-Moe
 
More of the high standard figures from JJD, I love the concept of the separate bases and I hope this becomes standard practice with all figures by all the makers, this will make life easier for those who make dios and can't see why this can't be done as normal practice as it is the best of both worlds and would keep everyone happy IMO. :salute::
Wayne.
 

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I think separate bases is a great concept. Wonder why no one has done it before.
 
I think separate bases is a great concept. Wonder why no one has done it before.

that is very innvotaive...I love it...

but wouldn't it only work on "kneeling"..."sitting"...or figures designed to stand balanced without a base...

I mean...it is limited on what figures this can work...
 
that is very innvotaive...I love it...

but wouldn't it only work on "kneeling"..."sitting"...or figures designed to stand balanced without a base...

I mean...it is limited on what figures this can work...
What it does I think gives the collector the option to either have the figure in a dio where you would glue it down or some other way of attachment and then you don't have all the drama of covering the bases and those that just want to display their figures can glue the figure to base (something any one can do), seems easy to me, it gives extra choice to the collector and surely that's a good thing.
Wayne.
 
I have some fiugures that IMO the stand ruins the figure,especially lying down figures never understood why they need a stand to lie,or a stand to sit,or a stand to kneel.
 
The bases are separate until the manufacturers glue them on.Why not just leave them off but included with a figure in case someone wants to use it.When I get my kits done I usually ask the painter to paint the base but leave the figure off it and I get pins in the bottom of the feet.If I decide to use the base I just glue the figure on it.Sometimes the pins fit right into the base,sometimes I cut the pin off or I make small hole to insert the pin.
Mark
 
The bases are separate until the manufacturers glue them on.Why not just leave them off but included with a figure in case someone wants to use it.When I get my kits done I usually ask the painter to paint the base but leave the figure off it and I get pins in the bottom of the feet.If I decide to use the base I just glue the figure on it.Sometimes the pins fit right into the base,sometimes I cut the pin off or I make small hole to insert the pin.
Mark

Most of the painted toy soldier manufacturers actually cast the figure and base as one piece, much different than 54mm kits.
 
I've removed a few and you could tell it was 2 pieces.
Mark
 
Most of the painted toy soldier manufacturers actually cast the figure and base as one piece, much different than 54mm kits.

Actually, as I understand, W. Britain figures for the most part are two pieces. Ken Osen once told me that the base removal is not hard to do at all . . . .
:smile2: Mike
 
While doing some research on the use of the Mark V British Tank in the Battle of Amiens, I came across this photo . . . . .
:smile2: Mike

The real deal J18 . . . .


JJD's J18 Version . . . .
 
While doing some research on the use of the Mark V British Tank in the Battle of Amiens, I came across this photo . . . . .
:smile2: Mike

The real deal J18 . . . .


JJD's J18 Version . . . .

Great releases...Love the photo Mike!

Pete
 
I'm a bit surprised no one released an Archduke Ferdinand car with this being the 100th anniversary. It sounded like KC and JJ might do something along those lines.
 

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