I also decided that it was time to start with the arm weapons for Varangian. This is something I have been putting of, waiting for the back piece to be finished, but I am starting to realize that the amount of work I have to put in to the dragons is taking to much time. So I drilled out the barrel of the volcano cannon and added some magnets for the shields. For the fist I decided that I would magnetize the wrist so that I can rotate the hand later on to the right position. So I added two 10 mm magnets with a 4 mm central hole to the wrist pieces and a 4 mm M4 rod going through both magnets and being anchored in the elbow. This should make it solid enough not to drop off. I have also been thinking about the mega bolter and how to magnetize it. Both the back of the hand and the underside of the mega bolter is rather detailed so adding big magnets was out of the question. The two pieces are however extremely well molded to each other so the mega bolter is really well oriented and can not move in the plane of the hand two pair os small, 4.5 mm, magnets is enough to keep it from falling off. I put them on the armor trim and hope that the thicker metallic paints will keep the magnets covered. I still have not added all the parts to the bolter but so far it is sitting still. I could add another pair of magnets at a third position if it turns out it is not enough.
Well that is all for now... I will add some small standard chaosifications to the volcano cannon and then I can start painting. The shields need some more advanced green stuffing so they will have to wait a bit.
The weapons on the big lady look good.
SvaraRaderaAnd I always love a Vorax !
Thanks. I saw that you have some Voraxes incoming that look really nice.
RaderaLooking good, I've just finished three Vorax for blogger buddy Zzzzzz, how did you find the ammo feed belts, what a pain I thought if you extended the arm too much.
SvaraRaderaThanks... The ammo feeds are just a bit short. I had to bend them as far as they would go and I could still not mount them to magazines as intended. Generally the models were a pain to assemble, but they look good.
Radera