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Showing posts with label Napoleonic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Napoleonic. Show all posts

Sunday, December 22, 2019

SOLD Painted 6mm Napoleonic 1809 french and Austrians for sale!

These have SOLD thank you!

I am simplifying my life some more and selling off my 6mm Baccus Napoleonic armies for the 1809 campaign.  They have not seen the table is years and AWI is my horse and musket period of choice and I'd rather see these fulfill their destiny on someone's table than gather dust in a drawer.  Plus I promise to immediately reinvest the revenue into my other projects!

Here is the catch, the two armies are based slightly differently, I got around to rebasing one and not the other.  The French are based per Baccus Polemos Standards on 60mm x 30mm bases while the Austrians are based on 20mm squares. You can play with them like that, you just have to move more stuff with the Austrians!

There are also bags of extra unpainted troops and a Bavarian contingent, see below for inventory.

Most of these are professionally painted by Fernando Enterprises, with maybe 20% painted by me.
All painted figures are Baccus, some of the unpainted are Adler Miniatures.

You get in total...

  • 1,304 Infantry
  • 168 Cavalry
  • 21 guns with crew
  • Commanders and unpainted troops

All for the low, low price of $700 US!  I will ship for free via USPS Priority Mail with insurance anywhere in the continental US. Overseas, we'll price it out and you can pay actual postage.  Pay Pal only please, let me know if you have any questions.

Thanks for looking!

Inventory and Pictures

(Click pictures to enlarge!)

French


  • 16 bases of Line Infantry (384 Figures)
  • 4 bases of formed Light Infantry with skirmishers (112 Figures)
  • 3 bases of Skirmishing Light infantry (48 figures)
  • 4 Bases of Light Cavalry (48 Figures)
  • 3 Bases of Heavy Calvary (36 Figures)
  • 11 Foot Artillery
  • 14 command bases (32 Mounted Officers)
Total:84

544 Foot
84 Mounted
11 Guns with Crew
32 Mounted Officers

Line and Light Infantry





Commanders and Guns


Cavalry




Austrians


  • 59 bases of Regular Infantry (including some Grenadiers) (472 figures)
  • 12 bases of heavy cavalry (36 figures)
  • 16 bases of light cavalry (48 Figures)
  • 10 Guns with crew
  • 24 Bases of Landwehr formed (192 figures)
  • 2 Landwehr Skirmish bases (16 figures)
  • 4 bases of Jaegers (32 Figures)
  • 6 bases of Skirmishing Grenze (48 Figures)
  • 10 Command Bases (24 mounted officers)

Total
760 Foot
84 Mounted
10 Guns
24 mounted officers

Infantry

Cavalry

Guns

Lanwher Reservists, Jaegers, Grenzers


Unpainted

I also have several bags worth of unpainted figures, a few extra Landwher and Grenzers, but mostly Bavarian allies for the french.  At least 2 Baccus bags worth of foot, 8 guns, a bag of Cavalry, and some Adler jaegers and light cavalry.


Saturday, August 9, 2014

Battle of Bratwurst: 6mm Napoleonic Black Powder

I apologize for the lack of updates, it has been a busy summer, with gardening, camping, a cruise in July, and general family skulduggery.  As Mrs. Tin Man is a teacher, our summer's get pretty busy.

I did get the awesome print for Father's Day of General Gordon himself!  It hangs proudly in the game room. 

Last weekend, Tom was kind enough to drive up for my first game of Black Powder with my 6mm Napoleonic troops.  In short, I really enjoyed the rules and think it gave a fast, but good game.  Nothing illogical happened, and the command rolls added a nice level of tension.

We played on my new 3' x 4' table, at 1/3 scale, which worked pretty well.  Infantry battalions in line had a n 80mm frontage (with 32 figures), a single infantry move was 4" and musket range was 6".  We played down the long axis of the table, which was the equivalent of a 9' by 12' table at normal scale!
During game prep, Bear the wargaming kitty registers his disdain, I think he is a 28mm chauvinist...
 I kept the scenario fairly simple, Austrians versus French somewhere in Bavaria in 1809 during the initial Austrian invasion.  Tom took the Austrians and I took the French.  The Austrians were tasked with seizing the village of Bratwurst to open a path for follow on divisions.  The Austrian OOB was:

  • Avant Garde Brigade:
    • Two battalions of Grenzers (in skirmish order)
    • Two battalions of Light Cavalry (Hussars)
  • Two Infantry Brigades, each consisting of:
    • 4 x Line Battalions
    • 1 x Position Battery
All entered in column on Tom's end of the table.

Tom sets up as I prepare to feel the full fury of the Hapsburg's!
 The French had one Infantry Brigade in a blocking position in Bratwurst and surrounds, with another infantry brigade and a brigade of hussars reinforcing from my end of the table staring on turn 2.  The French OOB was:

  • 2 x Infantry Brigades
    • 3 x Battalions of Line Infantry
    • 1 x Battalion of Light Infantry (in skirmish order)
    • 1 x Foot Battery
  • 1 x Light Cavalry Brigade
    • 3 x Regiments of Hussars
Things started heating up on my left flank, as the Grenzers moved to assault the light battalion in the wood.  They would drive me out eventually, but at the loss of one of the Grenze battalions breaking.


 On my right / Austrian Left, I had left my artillery battery exposed, which Tom, nicely took advantage of and sent his Hussars charging in!  He needed 3+ to hit, and when he rolled his attack dice, he rolled all 3's...  Needless to say, my battery was wiped out.  Lesson learned, don;t leave artillery hanging out by itself, unsupported.
What are the chances? 1 in 46,656...
 Here you can see my reinforcements slowly streaming on to the table.  I flubbed several command rolls.  Another lesson learned, put your senior commander where you need him most.  I should have had him helping the reinforcements come up faster.  Also, you can see Tom's light cavalry coming around my right flank, where they will delay my reinforcement column. (You can also see the musket and artillery range sticks I made.)

 Here are his hussars hitting my reinforcements, causing my lead cavalry regiment to flee.  I did swing around and hit him in the flank, breaking one regiment, but...
 ... that delayed me long enough that he was able to overrun my forward brigade in heavy fighting.

 Here is what the end of the battle looked like.  Tom had taken his objective with minimal losses, while I had seen my forward brigade mauled and my reinforcements barely getting engaged.  We called it at this point as an Austrian win, I really hope the Emperor gets here soon...
I greatly enjoyed the rules and I think Tom did as well.  We came to a decision in 3 hours of play, and that includes stopping to look up rules, snack breaks, etc.

Thanks Tom for a great game, and I cannot wait for a rematch!

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Maneuvers on the Marchfeld : 6mm Austrians on Parade


Here is a quick review of my Austrian army for the 1809 campaign.  All figures are from Baccus, and all figures, except for the Grenzers, were painted by Reinforcements by Post about 5 years ago.  The Grenzer and bases were painted by me.

I currently have order a few more troops to fill out the order of battle, including Lanweher and Jaegers.

The troops are mounted on 20mm x 20 mm squares from Litko, with flex steel on the bottom of the bases for storage with magnets.

Details of the various branches of service: (click on photos to enlarge)

Light Cavalry

The light cavalry contingent consists of 4 regiments of Hussars, organized in to 4 base units, for a total of 12 figures each.  These will be handy brigaded together or as part of an avant garde brigade.

Heavy Cavalry

The heavy cavalry consists of 3 regiments of Cuirassiers, ready to charge for glory! 

Line Infantry

The core of the infantry consists of 43 bases of 8 figures each, 344 figures total!  I usually organize them in to 4 base battalions, but I can build large 5 base units.  I somehow only wound up with 8 command bases, so any more than 8 battalions leaves a unit or two orphaned without flags.

(Note: I just noticed I need to resort the troops so that the regimental facings are sorted correctly!  Tut, tut... I would expect this from Friekorps, but not from the heart of the Hapsburg army!)

Grenadiers

Big, strapping chaps ready to give what for to the frog! Four battalions of converged grenadiers.

Light Infantry

Three battalions of Grenzer from the Turkish border, deployed into skirmish formation.  For now, I will play with Grenzer exclusively as skirmishers.  So far, these are the only troops I painted myself.

I did not get any close up shots of the artillery, but I have 10 bases organized into five 2 gun batteries.

I am going to fill out the force with several battalions of Landwher and a couple of battalions of Jaegers.  Oddly enough, I have also ordered extra figures in order to play Sharp Practice at half scale in 6mm.  Madness?  Perhaps...  I did enjoy my solo excursion with Black Powder, but am not sure I got all of the rules right, so will give it another spin soon.

Still finishing basing the French, so until next time, happy gaming!

Sunday, April 27, 2014

6mm Gaming Table

Background

For years, I have been attracted to the allure of 6mm figures.  Early on, I was convinced by the prophet of 6, Peter Berry of Baccus Miniatures.  So much so, I sold all of my 15mm ancients armies 10 years ago after losing interest in playing DBM tournaments (I kept bringing Gauls, which while impressive looking on the table, are not terribly competitive against armored knights from 1500 years in the future.)

His excellent article outlining his philosophy can be found here, if you are unfamiliar.

About 5 years ago, I developed an itch to get into some sort of horse and musket period, and commissioned French and Austrians for the 1809 campaign from a figure painting outfit.  Why those?  I had never been a Napoleonics buff, but knew that 1809 was the first time Napoleon suffered a defeat on the battlefield personally, and the armies seemed semi-balanced.  Plus, everyone in the world seems to do the Peninsula.  So many dollars later, I found myself the proud owner of two decently sized forces.  And they proceeded to sit in boxes for the next 5 years...

Anyway, with various life upheavals, I have never come close to bringing a 6mm project to completion... until now.

I finally pulled them out, based them up, and began to work on terrain for them.  I will show off the troops and talk rules in future posts, but for now I would like to walk you through my terrain build.

The Plan

I am very fortunate that Mrs. Tin Man is very supportive of the hobby and we have a dedicated game room at the front of the house.  Also, when we moved, I inherited our old kitchen table, which is 4 feet by 4 feet and counter height with nice bar stools.  I have played skirmish games on it in 28mm, and I probably could set a 6 x 4 foot top on the table, but frankly, I don't want to.   It would significantly intrude in to the room, and I'd like to be able to sit down at my nice table, with room for quick reference sheets, a drink, plaec for my elbows, and dice towers so dice don't go tumbling all over the place.

Then inspiration struck via the excellent Battlefields and Warriors blog.  I have been following Norm's pin board gaming project, and it inspired me to try something similar myself.

A quick read through my copy of Black Powder finally locked my plan in place. "Standard" infantry frontage is 240mm.  My 6mm armies are based with four x 20mm square stands per unit, for a total frontage of 80mm.  Scaling Black Powder down to 1/3 scale is my perfect solution!!!!  Unit movement rates will still be easy enough, with infantry moving 4 inches per move.  And best of all, a 2' x 4' gaming board would equate to a 6' x 12', just like the Perry's play on!  I could put it on my table and still have room for elbows, sheets, etc. and game sitting down in comfort, with enough room to maneuver 32 figure battalions!

I began to gather materials, and here is how it worked out...

(Click photos below to enlarge)

Execution

First, there was a visit to my local lumber store for a 2' x 4', 1/2" thick oak project panel.  I also bought the same thing in 2' x 2' to use for hills, more later.

I also went down to my local train shop and bought a Woodland Scenics grass mat.  I purchased the "Grass Green" version, next time, I will go with "Summer Grass," as it does not quit look so much like a golf course.  this is a neat product, basically a flocked, vinyl mat.
I cut it roughly to fit, glued it down with white glue, rolled out the air bubbles with a rolling pin, stack books on it, and left it to dry overnight.
After drying overnight, I went back and trimmed the excess on the edges with an exacto knife.  My original plan was to frame the edges with molding, but my attempts to miter the corners with a hand saw failed miserably.
So, back to the home improvement store.  I purchased some oak strips that were 1 1/2" x 1/2" and decided to frame the bard with that, no mitering required.  The downside is that I lose 3" off of the 2' depth of the board, but it was easy to cut and gue, then nail in to place using small, brass nails.
The next step was to head to the garage and using my trusty jig saw, I cut out hill shapes with a 45 degree slant. Fully contoured hills look amazing, but I am looking for practical and would like to be able to indicate substantial elevation changes on my table if I want to.  The raw results look like this, with a lone 6mm battalion wandering the field.

I next went back outside, and spray painted the hills with the cheapest brown spray paint I could find. Green may have been a better pick, but brown blends OK too.  I then cut pieces of the grass mat and glued them down to the tops of the hill sections.
Hills were done, now I needed some woods.  Years ago, when I had the troops painted, I also picked up a box of trees on the cheap from a model railroad supplier from China on eBay called "We Honest."  I have to say they are, because I got a couple hundred trees in the mail in less than a week, and if I need mroe, I will certainly buy from them again.

I started out making tree based from some black foamcore I had laying around, beveling the edges with an exacto knife, gluing small pieces of the grass mat to the top, and painting the edges green.
I finished them off by gluing down trees to the perimeter, ad I read about as a kid in a CS Grant book, Wargame Tactics.  It does not look to bad, here are some 6mm individually base sci-fi infantry wandering passed a copse.
And here is what the finished table looks like with a Miniature World Maker road, farmhouse from Baccus Miniatures, and field from the carpet sample pile at Lowe's!  I am playing a solo game to learn the Black Powder rules, and have made quick reference sheets that scale the game down to 1/3.

I am running identical Austrian and French brigades against each other, will provide some commentary in a future post.

Here is a closeup of some of the French.

And here are the Austrians!

So there it is, my gaming table.  I intend to do a desert version for the Sudan, and both will work for the 6mm Sci-Fi skirmish stuff I want to do.  Just goes to show you, you don't need a huge area to have an enjoyable, pretty game!