I have ships. Lots of ships. I think over 30 of GHQ's absolutely fantastic 1:2400 scale WWII era United States Navy ships. So far I have the following,
Carriers
-Yorktown Class
--CV-6 USS Enterprise
-Essex Class
--CV-10 USS Yorktown
-Sangamon Class
--CVE-26 USS Sangamon
-Casablanca Class
--CVE-73 USS Gambier Bay
Battleships
-Montana Class
--BB-67 USS Montana
-Iowa Class
--BB-61 USS Iowa
-South Dakota Class
--BB-60 USS Alabama
--BB-59 USS Massachusettes
Battlecruisers
-Alaska Class
--CB-1 USS Alaska
Heavy Cruisers
-Baltimore Class
--CA-69 USS Boston
--CA-70 USS Canberra
Light Cruisers
-Cleveland Class
--CL-56 USS Columbia
--CL-57 USS Montpelier
-Atlanta Class
--CL-53 USS San Diego
--CL-54 USS San Juan
--CL-96 USS Reno
--CL-97 USS Flint
-Omaha Class
--CL-8 USS Detroit
Destroyers
-x3 Sumner Class
-x9 Fletcher Class
-x3 Farragut Class
Destroyer Escorts
-x3 Butler Class
-x9 Bagley Class
And a whole crapload of aircraft.
Anyway that's a lot of stuff that needs painting and after building a few of the ships and seeing how stupidly tiny some of the details and guns are, I've decided that I want to base them. I did some measuring and came up with the following sizes I want for my ships. All sizes are in inches.
Fighters (2 per base) - 0.75 x 0.75
Bombers (1 per base) - 1 x 1
Torpedo Boats (4 per base) -
Motor Torpedo Boat -
Submarine -
Destroyer Escort - 2.25 x 0.75
Destroyer - 2.75 x 0.75
Light Cruiser - 3.5 x 1
Heavy Cruiser - 4.25 x 1
Battlecruiser - 4.75 x 1.25
Battleship -
Battleship (Iowa) - 5.25 x 1.25
Escort Carrier -
Fleet Carrier - 5.5 x 1.5
Ok so now that I had sizes I went and did some price checking. I found a website called http://bayareayards.virtualscratchbuilder.com/ that has some pretty damn sweet bases made specifically for GHQ ships. They're made out of resin and each base is sculpted to fit a specific hull. They're pretty nice but then I saw the price and immediately closed the site. Over $3 just to put a base on my Montana? No thank you kind sirs. People have at times asked me why I go so cheap on supplies and such when I buy such expensive models. One short answer is the cheap stuff usually works just as well as the expensive stuff. Another short answer is that I spent so much money on the models that I no longer have much money for supplies. Anyway I headed off to http://www.litko.net/ to use their base maker utility and get these things priced out. One thing I found interesting was that 1.5mm acrylic bases were $1 per package cheaper than the same sized bases in 1.5mm thick plywood. At any rate I was looking at $100 for acrylic bases and $115 for plywood ones. No thank you kind sirs.
Hours and hours of research and failed ideas later it hit me like a ton of bricks. Matboard. That stuff that they put in picture frames. That's matboard. It's not too thick and not too thin and I remembered it being fairly sturdy. Headed off to Hobby Lobby but couldnt find any matboard that I wanted but ended up seeing some artist board that looked perfect. I picked up a 3 pack of Canson artist board in just about 10"x8" sheets for $8 bucks. Pro tip at Hobby Lobby if you want to save money. Whip out your smartphone at the store and go to www.hobbylobby.com and under the graphic click on the coupon button. Show that to the cashier and get the discount for ANY one item you're buying at regular price. You can use that coupon for one item once a day. Right now it's 40% off and last week I got my mom a $200 painting for $120 by using that coupon.
Moving on, this is what the artist board looks like.
I then marked out the base sizes and labeled them. DD for destroyer, DE for destroyer escort, CA for heavy cruiser, and CL for light cruiser. No left handed person's art project is complete without ink smudging.
On the first sheet I cut everything by hand using an exacto knife and a metal ruler. It took hours and my fingers were numb by the end of it. What's worse, they looked like shit. The blade is thin so everything was beveled in different directions. Sizes were off by a lot at times and the multiple cuts it takes to cut through the sheets showed through on the sides.
Atrocious. These were unacceptable and I had to figure out how to get them done right. In another moment of genius I remembered a big ass paper cutter I had.
Surely this beast would be able to cut through the artist board?
And cut through it it did. 15 minutes later I had 2 CL bases, 2 CA bases, 14 DE bases, 16 DD bases, and 2 fighter aircraft bases plus just a little bit of waste material. What's even better is that the variation in the sizes is 1mm or less which isn't anything to complain about. If you want better then get a laser cutter or buy laser cut bases which obviously defeats the whole purpose of making $100 worth of bases for $8. I will be using drywall putty to make waves on them before mounting the ships.
Ship pictures to come in the future. I also have more Israelis on the way for some fun and easy projects such as the Sholef self propelled artillery conversion, Namer AIFV conversion, and Merkava conversions into ARV and bridgelaying variants! FUN!
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