Sunday 7 October 2018

British in Egypt Artillery Limbers

The final pieces in the British in Egypt project are under way. These are the limbers for the artillery.

 

The British had issues with the artillery in this campaign largely due to a chronic lack of horses. When the fleet sailed for Egypt there were only around 800 poor quality horses available for the entire expedition. After the landings at Abukir Bay the number of horses landed for the artillery was 186 to support 46 field pieces and 36 siege guns. It was a woefully inadequate number and for the advance on Alexandria large groups of sailors from the fleet were drawn on to drag the guns by hand.

 

To compound their issues with the horse shortage, the wheels to bit deep into the soft sand of the Abukir Peninsula and impeded movement. To resolve this issue some clever individual thought of binding barrel staves to the gun and limber wheels so that they had a wider footprint and wouldn’t sink so deeply. The Perry guns for this period indeed have those staves moulded to the wheels as shown below.

 


The Perrys also make the sailors drawing the guns, but don’t make the limbers and attempts to convince them to supply me the separate components to build these failed. Since I have all the limbers for the French guns, I have to do the limbers for the Brits, and so this little sub-project was born.

 

My first problem was finding out what the limbers looked like in 1801. Were they like the limber we all know from Waterloo with the split trail, split ammunition box and horses in teams, or were they like the Seven Years War and American Revolution limber where the horses were in tandem? Lacking an access to published information I searched the web, but found no conclusive answer. Then I spotted these images on the Perry’s Facebook page. 



Thinking that they have better references than me I decided that if this was good enough for them, it was good enough for me too, although I decided to make mine with just a single ammunition box and may choose to add some stowage on some of the models.

 

The model shown has the barrel staved wheels and two ammunition boxes so I started to figure about how to make them. At first I thought about buying the Front Rank limber and converting it, but then I had a better idea. Victrix make a plastic limber that comes without horses. Of course it comes with a gun and crew, but I can use the guns and crews with the War of 1812 armies and with a Peninsular War army that can be pieced together from the stovepipe shako British from the Egypt collection. What appealed to me here was that I could make the barrel staves from plasticard and fix them easily to the plastic wheels with plastic glue.  

 

I ordered two sets of Victrix British artillery to give me the six limbers I need and in due course they arrived.


My first task was to cut some barrel staves from plasticard. I figured that I would need about 30 per wheel so I got to work. It was a tedious task cutting 30 slightly irregular shaped staves, but I had it done in about 15 minutes.



I then glued them on to the wheel, leaving a gap of around 1mm between them.



I then sought out something to use for the ropes that were used to tie the staves. They would run around the edge of the wheel, but underneath the staves. My first thought was to make the rope from two strands of 22 gauge wire wound tight together by using a battery drill, but this proved to be too rigid and getting the right size and shape was just too difficult.

 

Instead I chose to use some light fishing cord that I was able to cut to the exact length and glued into place around the wheel. 


I had intended to use some sewing thread to lash the staves to the wheels, but this was far too fiddly for me and instead I used small pieces of Green Stuff.

 

 

The various pieces were then assembled to complete the limber.


 

Then the limber was painted.


Finally the teams of sailors were added and the model finished.






That is one limber down, five to go.


I am being a bit of a butterfly at present, fliting between several concurrent projects, as a number of posts in the next week will demonstrate.

19 comments:

  1. Many details to enjoy, a very impressive job! And your work on the base adds a lot...

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  2. Very clever modeling, very nice brushwork. Really impressed with your requirement for authenticity!

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  3. This is a fine and very resourceful bit of conversion work, Mark. Looks great!

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    1. Thank you Jonathan. Of course I now have six British guns left over from the artillery sets that are in need if an army - the existing War of 1812 and Peninsular forces are too small to be classed as an army - so could is be the start of another project?

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    2. There are many good reasons why not, but when did reason ever get in the way of a wargames project?

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    3. Is "reason" even in the calculus?

      Looking at your laboring sailors again, I am impressed both by the sculpting and your painting. These guys really look to be putting their back into their work.

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    4. I sometimes think that "reason" is a much abused word, like "urgent".

      I agree Alan Perry certainly has got the animation just right with this set - you can feel the strain. I like the fact that he has some with the ropes over left shoulder and some over the right, that gives a nice mix. I have been experimenting with the other unpainted sets and it is possible to get some nice variation to the straight line of men with some lines veering to the left or right.

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  4. Very effective Mark...
    I can see how doing a dozen wheels could get very boring very fast...mixing them up with fun painting stuff is definitely the way to go...
    It would be just typical that when you have finished them Alan (Perry) knocks a limber out himself for the range...:-l

    All the best. Aly

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    1. Thanks Aly. Actually the wheels weren't as difficult as I originally thought they would be and after completeing the first one, I found that I could complete the second in about an hour while watching TV.

      Alan did say that he hasn't done the limbers "yet", so you are probably right. Nonetheless I will have six limbers completed by the end of the month.

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  5. Nice work, plastic was the way to go!
    Best Iain

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    1. It certainly was the way to go. I will plug away at these over the next few weeks...maybe a wheel every couple of days so that sanitiy is retained.

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  6. A great job on the modelling here Mark...I can fully understand the butterfly mode however, I don't think I could go through that process 6 times in a row and stay sane!

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    1. I will get another one done this week - the sailors are already done. I have another four units from three separate projects in various stages of completion that should trundle onto the blog this week.

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  7. Great work, and really worth the effort. Those sailors look like they were made for the job.

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    1. Yes they are great, aren't they? I started another wheel last night and will have another limber finished a little later. I like the way in which the sailors can be switched around a little to give some variety, but painting those striped trousers is a nightmare for me - never could paint a straight line.

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    2. I guess that's why only 1 of 12 has striped breeks Mark?!

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    3. In the next batch of 12 there are more of them. The one that actually gets me in the horizontal stripes across their shirts, which I haven't managed to achieve yet.

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