Hi Tim
1. Do posters find B useful/playable terrain-types?
Have not used them yet but I think the could close flanking troops down and be a good defense ploy accross the middle of the table with some thing like Ax(S) or Bw, bit like fixed obsticles you do not have to pay for.
2. How best are they deployed and are there any particular terrain-picking strategies that you find help getting them where you would like them (for example, in combo with other picks, selecting a side/rear edge as your "6" edge and/or length of B)?
I feel that they do go down fairly late so may not go down at all.
I have noticed in most games I have played across the water that players only nominate the terrian they will take not present it first, it would be good ( if very cheesey ) if one had adjustable B's to fit. I think the best combination would be with a water feature giving a nice safe rectangle for Bw(I) to hide behind. Flank positioning to slow armies that want to get around you ( your recent foray's into Nikes ), centre of table to slow down massed irregulars ( Wb(O) and Kn(F) ), and of course kill pursuing expendables.
3. Any particular advice on modelling B for the tabletop? I think that I have seen cut-up brillo-pads suggested??
This is why I responded ( you can ignore the rest above ), I like the idea of thin 10cm strips of door mat, I have seen them used in 28mm for corn fields etc. ( looking a small bit like the border hedge surrounding the Shire I like to imagine ),one may consider them a bit tall but I think of B as those lovely estate walls that can be seen through out the British isles, 9 or 10 feet tall ruuning along external roads, dry stone of course with about 10 yards or so of trees on the inside keeping the riff raff out of the hunting grounds.
Yes I did consider railway walls, two of them with a gap between, filled with moss type flock ( that stuff I have never found a use for { though to be fair I can not paint and model so very rarely } ) signifing dry stone ditches with trees and scrub growing on and in ( bit like the country borders of our own garden ).
But the issue is they can not be rectangular (
?), so must be fairly rounded at the end ( achieve that in 1cm ), and as 1 cm wide it will be a miracle if any thing straddling the B stays on top, so it may have to be 'naff' felt.
Thomas used some lovely log sections for fixed obsticles in Munster this year if there is any pictures going around.
Sorry I forget to shut up sometimes
William