Help support TMP


3Dprintable 1:3000 HMS Exmouth Available


Back to Hobby News


Areas of Interest

World War Two at Sea

Featured Recent Link


Featured Showcase Article

GallopingJack Checks Out The Terrain Mat

Mal Wright Fezian goes to sea with the Terrain Mat.


Featured Workbench Article

Basing Small-Scale Aircraft for Wargames

Mal Wright Fezian experiments to find a better way to mount aircraft for wargaming.


Featured Profile Article

The Simtac Tour

The Editor is invited to tour the factory of Simtac, a U.S. manufacturer of figures in nearly all periods, scales, and genres.


Featured Book Review


53 hits since 2 Sep 2025


©1994-2025 Bill Armintrout
Comments or corrections?

Wargame Vault announces the availability of:

From FSpace Publications

STL (3D Model) – $4.00 USD

HMS Exmouth

HMS Exmouth (H02) is the class flotilla leader of the E-class destroyers built in the 1930s.

Scale 1:3000

Simple one-piece model design for smaller scales, and tweaked to ensure as compliant as possible with Shapeways across the range of materials offered, and the perfect base on which modellers can add the fine detail flourishes to, depending on your skill level. The model has 'floored guns' for the best durability to reduce breakages and be printable in the material offered. Designed by Philip Warnes, and can be used at an appropriate hex scale with his SeaLion Supremacy game, or any other naval tabletop game that uses this scale.

If you have family that served on this vessel class, why not print a miniature to keep as a small family keepsake or gift for someone else whose family served onboard? Or maybe you had family who worked at the yards that built this vessel. Keep your family military history alive.

Build your fleet today.

During WWII and its aftermath, destroyers can play host to the deployment of special forces units like the British Special Boat Service and its predecessors. For tabletop roleplayers, a destroyer miniature can be used as a token to show the deployment point out at sea as special forces launch in smaller craft. Destroyers may even provide fire support to coastal landings, or as diversions. During D-Day, quite a few U.S. and U.K. destroyers provided such fire support for the troops landing on the beaches. While such miniatures are typically used for wargaming, you can use them to add depth and interest to a roleplaying game sessions.

For more information