Lead Adventure Forum
Miniatures Adventure => The Second World War => Topic started by: FramFramson on May 10, 2017, 12:45:46 AM
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I have been using bolt action arms from the various infantry sprues for conversions - they're immensely useful!
What I've found is that the sizes of arms and hands are not actually consistent. The Blitzkrieg German infantry arms work for larger figures, mostly men, whereas the regular British infantry are better for smaller models, mostly women (funny enough the British heads are larger than the German heads). Those are the main two I have, besides a couple weapon sprues which don't really give me a good indication.
As I need more arms and am fishing around for spares, I'm trying to figure out what alternatives are in similar sizes and what other infantry sprues I could try to obtain spares from. Could anyone compare the arms from various nations? Regular Germans vs Blitzkrieg, Russians, Americans, and so forth?
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The original kits, the Brits and the German are smaller (although I believe the LW German have been remastered).
The later kits blitzkrieg germans, Winter Russians, fallschrimjager, Japanese, marines all work fine together.
I have not used the US or summer Russians, but I believe that are the older 'smaller' style.
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US are a bit on the small size ... and US airborne are a bit on the Orangutan side ... long long arms ... and oversized weapons at least the BAR and the MG ...
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Many thanks guys!
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The US marines are on the large side, while the Japanese infantry is tiny in comparison. As an example, the prone marines completely fill a 25x50 oval base and the prone Japanese fit with a little overhand on a 25mm round. This size difference applies to both metals and plastics. :o
regards, Bill
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Good to know.
Anyone know if the German Grenadiers are the newer, larger sort, or older, smaller ones? They have double sleeves which could be useful for figures wearing coats or suits.
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There's not a huge difference between the arms of the Panzergrenadier & late war plastics, the PzG's are a tiny bit chunkier - though the hands are a bit more so. Here's some pics of the sprues, hope it's helpful (the LW on the left & the PzG's on the right).
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Great, thanks!
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It depends on the sculptor, the old Paul Hicks stuff is noticeably smaller, while the newer stuff steadily creeps upwards, the new chindits are massive compared to the old ones.