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Wednesday, 7 May 2025

Warlord Games 1/56 M10 Tank Destroyer & Rubicon 17pdr SP Achilles

 Some time ago I bought the Rubicon M10/Achilles kit for my stash, but only decided to build it when I received the Warlord M10 model as part of my recent Bolt Action £100 Bargain Box.


My thinking was I'd compare the two to see which I preferred.


To be honest, there was little to pick between them, as they both went together very well and are almost identical in size, so could be used on the table together.

The Rubicon model is in the lefthand tray and the Warlord model in the righthand tray - Primed ready to spray

There are pro's and con's with both, but nothing that sets one apart from the other. It's down to what do you need in a model? I've tried to summarise the comparisons in the table below


If it's variety, then the Rubicon allows more options. If it's a crewed vehicle, then the Warlord model has this covered. You'll need to invest in aftermarket figures for the Rubicon - as I did. Don't forget to watch what glue you use. The ABS used by Rubicon needs something like Tamiya Extra thin cement - not standard polystyrene glue.


Incidentally, these figures came from eBay, 3D resin printed by Garrison Miniatures. They needed very little clean-up (just an odd bobble of resin where the supports were attached) and painted up extremely well.

Nice figures, depicted in their cold weather "Pixie Suits"

I painted the vehicle in almost identical schemes for initial comparison. I pre-shaded with a dark panzer grey, before over-spraying a couple of coats of thinned Olive Drab.


I then sprayed the centres of each panel with a slightly lightened Olive drab to add some depth. The panel detail was brought out with a Dark Brown pin-wash, before a light dry-brush of Iraqi sand.

17pdr. SP Achilles - Rubicon

Finally I added some dark Chocolate brown chips and a dusting of AK powders. All paints were Vallejo. Finally both received a coat of Lucky Ultra-matt varnish.

M10 Tank Destroyer - Warlord/Italeri

I had already decided I'd paint the M10 to represent a Battle of the Bulge vehicle. To do this I masked the big areas of the vehicle that I did not want covered in whitewash, with decorators tape. Then areas like the open turret top and vehicle markings were masked with AK masking putty.


This is weird stuff to use, but works well. As I masked it one evening and painted the following day, the putty settled until it completely filled the turret! Easy enough to remove, but weird.



I then sprayed with AK Washable White Paint. I haven't used this before, but I'm really impressed! It does exactly what it says on the tin. Once dry I washed some off with water and a stiff brush to give a very realistic worn finish. Finally another coat of Lucky Ultra-matt and some AK powders.


Both of these were good models to build, I'd recommend them both!






M36 90mm Turret included with Rubicon model












2 comments:

  1. Very handy comparison. I always find the Rubicon models are more like 'proper' scale model kits while the Warlord kits are more wargaming models. Both good for different reasons.

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    1. Yes I think that's fair comment. Rubicon kits are getting more sophisticated all the time and more detailed with it.

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