BRRING BRRING
"Hello, Forgeguard Activated First Armored. "
"Tanks department, please."
"Speaking."
"Do you have anything that can flatten an infantry company by itself?"
"Sure do. How many do you want?"
"Uh, one?
"Just one? Are you sure?"
"No. Send me something to blow up other super heavies, too."
"So, which is it?"
"Better send one of each."
"Hold please."
With the sad closing of my local game store, they were liquidating all of their stock, so I was able to nab a some superheavy kit cheap. I remembered what folks like Joel over at Mordian 7th had done with their super heavies and some custom parts from Machinator's store on eBay, and decided to order up a set. Machinator even subbed out some tracks for dynamo generators, which was terribly nice of him.
Fighting them both at once is a terrible bitch. I mean, LOOK at them. |
FYI, I used the old shelf paper instead of the new mini-lightbox, as these tanks were too darn big for the lightbox. |
I had enough leftover parts to have two long barrels for Destroyer Tank Hunters and two Demolisher barrels for Thunderers or Vinidicators. These tanks are breeding tanks. crazy, I know. |
Every other M-type Stormhammer I've seen out there sports multi-meltas in the lower sponsons instead of the upper ones, which I generally regard as a tremendous mistake. MM's are short-ranged, and the Stormhammer is a barrage vehicle, not an assault tank. This way Smough can keep tanks at bay while pulverizing infantry.
I had actually painted Smough second, and was running out of metallics by this time. |
I kept the grill and engine hatch loose as well so I could display them open. It's the little things.
Ornstein was something else entirely.
He has two configurations (well, more if you count the barrel length variants, which to me are unnecessary) Shadowsword and Stormlord, and is switchable to everything in between.
I was tempted to get extra sponsons, but then the gunners wouldn't have had any field of view. |
The little top panels are magnetized, while the side panels are long pins. In retrospect, I could've made the interior guns swappable with flamers, too, but honestly, where's it all end? The sponsons are switchable as well, although I left the middle panels static. I realized my mistake only after everything was dry, because now if you stick a pair of rear sponsons on in Stormlord config, they obscure the rear stubber mounts. No big deal, as stubbers are kind of crap, but it's the principle of the thing. I suppose I could halfway ruin the thing and pry the plates off with a screwdriver, but ehhhh.
The (underpowered) Stormlord main gun is magnetized to go into the turret. Everything else relies on gravity and friction. |
I subbed in two surplus Valkyrie door gunners and painted them in Forgeguard Activated First Armored colors. I was tempted to do servitors, but with all the AdMech stuff out now, I wanted to make a differentiation between human auxiliaries and pure Mechanicum forces, which my army now seems to be splitting into.With their metallic bits, they do look slightly servitor-y anyway.
It's kind of frightening that according to the rules you can load the thing with Skitarii or Kataphron heavy servitors and drive it straight into the heart of the enemy with all cannons ablaze. Twenty infantry models from the top deck is a lot, even with that number reduced for model size you're talking about a blistering amount of firepower. Plus, if you use Kataphrons (why didn't they call them Praetorians? It sounds so much better) you'll have tiny tanks riding inside an enormous mama tank, which is both silly and horrifying at the same time. Let me know if you try it.
5 comments:
Oh, those are absolutely gorgeous! Superlative work, man - love the old epic-style Stormhammer conversion, and the multi-purpose Shadowsword/Stormlord is beautifully executed. Awesome stuff!
Thanks! I've been wanting to delve into super heavies for a while, and these sale kits were the perfect opportunity. :)
Hey I really like the paint scheme for the tanks!
Wandering if you can share the paint colours used... Looks like base coat black then a heavy dry brush of fenrisian grey ? :/
Thanks
@Fitness: Thanks! It's Mechanicus Standard Grey, then Adeptus Battlegrey, and finally that mixed with white to get that patterning in the lighter areas. For the metallics I use warplock bronze, then a 50/50 dry brush of warlock bronze and gunmetal. The gold name plates start at bronze also, and go up the gold spectrum through gehenna gold and auric gold, and get a highlight that's a mix of auric gold and mythril silver. Ornstein's exhaust covers were made coppery by use along the edges of Brass Scorpion with a bit of gold for highlight (again, just against the edges so as to frame the warlock bronze areas, as with my weathered penny Neuron scheme, found elsewhere on this blog).
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