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Made in us
Inquisitorial Scourge of Heretics






Tapping the Glass at the Herpetarium

I'm going to reuse some old kit.

Can I just slap on another base of the correct size to the bottom of the old slotta base and call it a day?
[Thumb - 1000067374.jpg]


 BorderCountess wrote:
Just because you're doing something right doesn't necessarily mean you know what you're doing...


"Vulkan: There will be no Rad or Phosphex in my legion. We shall fight wars humanely. Some things should be left in the dark age."
"Ferrus: Oh cool, when are you going to stop burning people to death?"
"Vulkan: I do not understand the question."

– A conversation between the X and XVIII Primarchs


 
   
Made in de
Oozing Plague Marine Terminator





There are base extenders and 1mm mdf bases, you know.

In the end it's totally up to taste. I'm one to mix different base sizes and model generations in the same unit and don't care, others don't like that and want their whole army in one scale and so on.
Personally I find just putting old base on new base extremely ugly in your picture, but they're your miniatures and basing might save those "towers".

Edit: I mean in this case these are unpainted metals, why not just rip them off the smaller base and put them into slids of newer ones'? The only time I would do what you've done there is when I want to use the minis in two different games that need the exact base size, but even then - magnetic base extenders all the way!

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2025/11/19 09:16:38


 
   
Made in gb
Decrepit Dakkanaut




UK

Base extenders work - doublebasing works - tearing the model off and adding it to a new base.

All these work. Doublebasing or base extenders might require you to adjust how you paint the base or hide the join between the two depending on how you model.

Doublebasing might also be considered cheeky if the game is very very strict on true line-of-sight to the model as your model is technically a little taller than normal, but its not out of the question for most as even just a sculpted base or detailed base would raise a model up easily by a similar (if not greater) amount

A Blog in Miniature

3D Printing, hobbying and model fun! 
   
Made in us
The Marine Standing Behind Marneus Calgar





Upstate, New York

The hight gained from double basing counters the scale creep.

The double stack does look a bit off. It might be painted and based it would be fine. But if I were you I’d use base extender rings and just roll with the fact that they are a little short compared to modern versions.

If you play with hardcore people who care about the few millimeters hight difference, clip and pin on a built up base is the most labor intensive, but most modern compliant answer.

   
Made in us
Fireknife Shas'el





Leicester

 Nevelon wrote:
The hight gained from double basing counters the scale creep.

The double stack does look a bit off. It might be painted and based it would be fine. But if I were you I’d use base extender rings and just roll with the fact that they are a little short compared to modern versions.

If you play with hardcore people who care about the few millimeters hight difference, clip and pin on a built up base is the most labor intensive, but most modern compliant answer.


For GW 25-32mm I use 3D printed extenders that have ~1mm under the original base (essentially cups, rather than rings), which brings the top of the base to the same height as the stock 32s. It’s surprising that when you do that even old 2nd/3rd metal inquisitors don’t look out of place amongst the modern models, certainly not outside the bounds of normal human variation.

DS:80+S+GM+B+I+Pw40k08D+A++WD355R+T(M)DM+
 Zed wrote:
*All statements reflect my opinion at this moment. if some sort of pretty new model gets released (or if I change my mind at random) I reserve the right to jump on any bandwagon at will.
 
   
Made in us
Inquisitorial Scourge of Heretics






Tapping the Glass at the Herpetarium

 Overread wrote:
Base extenders work - doublebasing works - tearing the model off and adding it to a new base.

All these work. Doublebasing or base extenders might require you to adjust how you paint the base or hide the join between the two depending on how you model.

Doublebasing might also be considered cheeky if the game is very very strict on true line-of-sight to the model as your model is technically a little taller than normal, but its not out of the question for most as even just a sculpted base or detailed base would raise a model up easily by a similar (if not greater) amount


I was trying to bring the Commissar up to the current height, as she stands right now, she looks like a girl cosplaying as a Commissar when she stands next to Karskin and Aquilons.

 BorderCountess wrote:
Just because you're doing something right doesn't necessarily mean you know what you're doing...


"Vulkan: There will be no Rad or Phosphex in my legion. We shall fight wars humanely. Some things should be left in the dark age."
"Ferrus: Oh cool, when are you going to stop burning people to death?"
"Vulkan: I do not understand the question."

– A conversation between the X and XVIII Primarchs


 
   
Made in us
The Marine Standing Behind Marneus Calgar





Upstate, New York

To be fair, a five foot nothing woman standing next to a six foot plus full kit roided up combat monster is going to do that…

   
Made in us
Inquisitorial Scourge of Heretics






Tapping the Glass at the Herpetarium

I also am loathing the idea of clipping off the tab for the slot base on my "Games Day Exclusive model, that I got when I turned 18."

 BorderCountess wrote:
Just because you're doing something right doesn't necessarily mean you know what you're doing...


"Vulkan: There will be no Rad or Phosphex in my legion. We shall fight wars humanely. Some things should be left in the dark age."
"Ferrus: Oh cool, when are you going to stop burning people to death?"
"Vulkan: I do not understand the question."

– A conversation between the X and XVIII Primarchs


 
   
Made in bd
Regular Dakkanaut






Sydney

 Lathe Biosas wrote:
I also am loathing the idea of clipping off the tab for the slot base on my "Games Day Exclusive model, that I got when I turned 18."

You can always make a slot in a larger base - drill through at where the ends of the slot would be, then slice along the middle until you've removed enough for the tab to fit into. It'll probably be a bit messy but it'll all be covered up by the model's footprint anyway.

   
 
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