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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

L Patrol Part 3- The Rescue

See L Patrol Part One and Part Two.

After being shifted from POW camp to POW camp, Captain McCall was finally placed in a small Garrison town Somewhere deep in Cyrenaica guarded by a contingent of underfed, undersupplied, and under-motivated Italian troops. They generally treated him well- even letting him taste their wine when they were lucky enough to acquire any. Here the fighting at El Alamein was little more than rumor, though both the former Skipper of L Patrol and the disillusioned Italians knew it was only a matter of time before Union Jacks flew across all of North Africa.

Meanwhile, after weeks of tips from friendly Arabs and intelligence from other Patrols and spies, the remaining boys of L Patrol (who by now had refit with new trucks- in some cases paid for by the men themselves) came to discover where their beloved Skipper was being held. They knew their goal was reckless, but luck had them carrying out patrols not 100 miles South, and the diversion order was given.


T1 patrol, led by McCall's driver Lt. Bowers, race up a road toward the Italian Garrison at dusk.



T2 patrol skirts around the Western flank of the Italian Garrison.


The Garrison.


The Italians see vehicles approaching from the South, but thinking it's supplies for them stand up and wave! They do receive ammunition, though not in any usable form!

"Let 'em have it boys!" Bowers screams as he looses a burst from his Vickers K.


The American .50 cal machine guns tear into the clay buildings.


The Italians are slow to recover, being caught completely by surprise.

"Go Go Go!!" desert veterans leap from the sides of their chev trucks under the cover of a wall of MG fire!


"They've started boys! Open up!" cries O'hara- the commander of T2 which has now flanked the Garrison. The Italians begin panicking and surrendering in numbers.


LRDG troops storm the defenses!


And completely overrun the defenders!


"Press on lads!"


Bowers stands to wave on the troops as a hail of rifle fire tears into his Jeep. Bowers slumps in the seat as the Jeep lights up.


Swerving around the wrecked Jeep, the patrol slams into the gate of the compound, MGs blazing!


McCall leaps to his feet in his cell, ready to fly with a faint smile on his face.


LRDG Troopers swarm the compound!


"What did I tell you about being heros? You're liable to get yourselves killed lads! Still- I'm glad to see you. Where's Bowers?"

The young troopers toss McCall a Thompson, but shake their heads in somber response to his question.


The patrols mount up, lead by T2 and head for safety just as the sun sets!


The first Italian reserves arrive in darkness, heading towards the burning wreck of the LRDG truck.


More Italian reserves arrive from a patrol, and immediately open fire on the LRDG!

"Quick- dim the lights! and keep moving!"


The Patrol attemps to slip by without returning fire.


But when the Italians spot them, both sides exchange fire!


"Hear that? Sounds like Jerry bikes to the West!"


"look out!" Two chev trucks go up in flames. A few troopers are able to jump free, firing their enfields wildly at the Italians. "They're right on top of us!"


The Italians surge forward! "Keep firing!" The remaining trucks pour every round they can muster into the rapidly advancing Italians!


The Italians are temporarily repulsed. "T2- let's go!" T2 escapes with most of their troops, but at the loss of 2 chevs.


"Aim for the muzzle flashes boys!" McCall screams from the back of Lt. Lonvingston's chev. T1 patrol attempts to race pass the Itlians with machine guns blazing!


The Italians are mercilessly gunned down. The scene is so brutal, McCall looks away as his patrol slips past in silence.


The German scouts attempt to catch up, but the patrol slips away into the darkness.


A stray shot from some Bersaglieri troops knocks out a chev- the crew jumps free.


"By God I think we're going to make it, Skip!" Cris Lovingston.

"Not so fast, mate- hear that?"

The blood drains from Lovingston's face as 5 shapes emerge from the darkness directly in front of them.


TO BE CONTINUED


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Sunday, December 5, 2010

WWPD News From the Front Episode 7

WWPD News From the Front- Episode 7 "Anglo-Allied Force Communication"
-Steven, Luke, and Brian sit down with a few choice Adult Snacks and shoot the breeze. We interview Wayne from Battlefront, discuss Man-Packed Gun Teams, The differences between "armored" and "fully armored" tank teams, and plenty more! The last few minutes see the guys just chatting it up about US Armored Rifles, and Panzergrenadiers.

Download this week's episode directly: https://files.me.com/indierockclimber/f3wfrx.mp3

Subscribe via iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/wwpd-news-from-the-front/id398903039
Subscribe with other: http://feeds.feedburner.com/WWPDPodCast

TABLE OF CONTENTS:
00:02- Interview with Wayne
00:31- Adult Snack Review
00:32- New Developments at WWPD
00:41- Battle Foam Display Board review
00:49- "Fully Armored" vs "Armored". Tank Teams!
00:57- Romanian & Hungarian Artillery Box Reviews
01:01- Man Packed Guns
01:11- General chat


A quick note: All T-Shirt sales on the WWPD Blog from here until the end of the year will see 100% of the profit donated to Donors Choose. Please consider picking up a shirt, and helping out local education at the same time!



e-mail us at WWPDPodCast@gmail.com
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My Flames of War Collection 4/6: The French!

Here's my French collection. A majority of this stuff is not Battlefront- having seen the BF models, I can honestly say the BF stuff is better, but I am quite happy with the Peter Pig tanks I picked up.

I am currently working on this army primarily, so the infantry is getting fleshed out more.















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Friday, December 3, 2010

My Flames of War Collection 3/6: DAK in North Africa

This is the 3rd installment of my entire FOW collection gallery. My DAK collection is probably only my 4th largest, but I am quite attached to it. To me, nothing quite says "North African Tank Battle" like a Panzer III with sand spraying behind it as it tears across the open sand.

















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Guest Book Review 2: Stuart!

Here is the 2nd book review by Max over at Fire For Effect!

BOOK
REVIEW:

Squadron/Signal
Publication’s “U.S. Light Tanks in Action” (Armor # 18).





Written
in 1979 by Steven Zaloga with illustrations by Don Greer. This 48
page soft cover landscape format book is published by
Squadron/Signal. It retails anywhere from $2.99 to 10.99 and is
available at most large scale hobby stores and online.




The
book is pretty comprehensive considering its size. There are over
100 B/W photographs and 10 color plates. The book covers all light
tanks from the M-2A2 to the M24 Chafee. It includes line drawings
from several angles of different models of tanks and technical
specifications.

Figure
: M3A1 mentioned in the article.

Figure
: M-5A1 plate shown in Italy, 1944.




The
book covers early light tanks like the M-2A2and shows many pictures
of trials and pre-war training excersises. There are multiple pages
covering the M3 and M3A1 Stuarts serving in all national services and
includes some information on varients and powerplants. A small
section gives some information on the M-22 “Locust” airborne tank
and the M-7 medium tank.

Figure
: M-5A1 with .50 Cal AA MG.

The
bulk of the book covers the M-5 and M-5A1 series with multiple
training and combat photographs. A great selection of pictures
showing field modificatiosn which included Culin cutters, up-armored
sandbag modifications, and several showing damaged and destroyed
vehicles in combat.

Figure
: Color plates from back cover.




The
last section covers the M-24 Chaffee light tank which came into
service in late 1944. There’s approximately 8-10 pages showing
combat photographs.




The
color plates are excellent showing various models in different
theaters of the war. One of my favorite plates is one showing an
M-3A1 in Tunisia, 1942. The markings are the early yellow marking,
has the side-saddle auxillary tanks and the vehicle is heavily
weathered in dust.




Overall,
for the price, you’re getting an excellent deal with great wartime
combat photographs. The section on the M-5 and M-5A1 is great
covering some interesting field modifications, including a lend lease
M-3A3 with a Flak 36 quad 20mm AA gun in place of the standard
turret.




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My Flames of War Collection 2/6: Italians in North Africa

This is the 2nd installment of my entire FOW collection gallery. The Italians in North Africa are by my smallest collection (being only slightly beaten by the French). Still, there is enough here to run 2 companies up to 2000 points with options (Bersaglieri or Carri).











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Thursday, December 2, 2010

My Flames of War Collection 1/6: British in North Africa

A thread on the FOW forum prompted me to finally sit down and pull out every FOW model I have for a showcase. This is part 1 of 6- my British Army in North Africa. I tried to take a video of this, but youtube didn't like it so that's something to look forward to in the 2nd installment!









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Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Track Tournaments right here on WWPD.net!

Hey guys! Thanks to a lot of hard work from Ed Leland and Chris Miller, WWPD now has a page dedicated to tracking all the upcoming FOW tournaments! To be honest, with the FOW Events page lacking, we decided to consolidate tournament information here due to the forums being difficult to navigate and Rankings HQ being somewhat out of the way

Seriously, the work of Ed Leland and Chris Miller should not go unappreciated- those two have put in a lot of work for tournament goers. Thanks guys!

Without further ado: http://www.whatwouldpattondo.net/p/upcoming-tournaments.html

You can email DeploymentZone@gmail.com with tournament information.
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WWPD Now on Twitter

Hey guys, quick update here.  WWPD is now on Twitter!  You can follow us here.  We'll post sneak peaks on the Podcasts, and notify you when new articles are posted.  

We've got a big podcast episode planned for Sunday.  We're going to be interviewing some battlefront movers and shakers, and getting some burning questions answered!
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