In White Dwarf #104 there’s a Chapter Approved guide to converting a Rhino:

With the following text:

And even a template!

In White Dwarf #104 there’s a Chapter Approved guide to converting a Rhino:
With the following text:
And even a template!
In White Dwarf #104 there’s a Chapter Approved article showcasing the new Robots range.
The names:
Crusader, Conqueror, Cataphract, Castellan, Colossus.
The article has art throughout:
It also has livery shown:
I asked Bob Naismith if he sculpted them and he said that he thought they were his, so I have credited them appropriately.
This metal skeleton with is an Aly Morrison sculpt, and was part number 074503/19. No tab on this guy.
While I primarily collect the older stuff, some of the later models are of interest to me… here’s the list of what I have found so far.
Page legend/key – explains what the icons mean
The 1999 catalogue credits these guys to Jes Goodwin, Dave Perry, Mark Bedford and Mike McVey.
These guys came in box part number 99110101299.
Found in the 2008 catalogue with the first part number and the 2005 with the latter. The box part number was 99110101300.
Found in the 2008 catalogue. This is the 99110101332 box.
These guys were designed by Jes Goodwin.
Shoulder pads go here!
Various heads.
These guys took some finding.
The second release of the Land Raider was on May 24th, 2000 as per WD245, and they ran specialised tank-building classes from that date called Imperious Rex.
Released in April 2000, designed by Tim Adcock as per WD245. The pilot was designed by Michael and Alan Perry.
TBA
Needed a second entry for the accordion to work.
This is a placeholder tab content. It is important to have the necessary information in the block, but at this stage, it is just a placeholder to help you visualise how the content is displayed. Feel free to edit this with your actual content.
This is a placeholder tab content. It is important to have the necessary information in the block, but at this stage, it is just a placeholder to help you visualise how the content is displayed. Feel free to edit this with your actual content.
Plastics, sure, but classic!
Forge World
Nothing yet.
These pads are marked as 1998 on the tab. The 1999 catalogue page credits everything on that page to Jes Goodwin, Mike McVey, Dave Perry and Mark Bedford – I don’t know which one did the shoulder pads.
This Land Speeder was seen in the RTB3 Devastators box set as well as the RT503 Imperial Army set – which had Imperial Army pilots and different weapons to the Space Marine one.
The 1991 catalogue credits it to Michael Perry, though the earlier RT stuff credits it to both Perry twins.
As seen in WD99:
This metal Medic is from the 4006/RT701 Medics range, and is Medic 02.
Credit for the Medics goes to Mark Copplestone, Aly Morrison and Michael and Alan Perry. I’m not sure who did this chap.
This guy was a Mark Copplestone sculpt and was a wounded Imperial Guard trooper from the Rogue Trader era of Warhammer 40K. The sculpt was part number 401114 originally and is from 1989.
This metal Rogue Trader Warhammer 40K Imperial Guard sculpt was from 1989 and was listed as part number 072033/5 in the 1991 catalogue.
This Metal Imperial Guard Trooper was a 1988 sculpt for the Rogue Trader edition of Warhammer 40K.
Another copy: