You'll find the answer in the Warhammer Rulebook or in the army book you are playing.
Bolt Thrower was created in 1986.
A High Elf Bolt Thrower can either have 1 normal bolt thrower shot (S7, strength reduces by one per rank until you fail to wound and causes D3 wounds against targets with multiple wounds) or it can shoot 6 S4 shots, these cause 1 wound each and have a -2 penalty to any armour sayes taken.
War - Bolt Thrower album - was created in 1992.
No you can't , the rules are completely different.
Planetary Empires is Gamesworkshops answer to that. It is a customizable board and has rules for a Warhammer 40K campaign.
AnswerAt the moment, GW do not make a set of rules for matches like that, so no, 40k armies can not play FB armies.== ==
No, each types rules are very different. There are some models that are used for both games, for example some chaos demones, and demonetts.
You'll find the answer in the Codex:Chaos Space Marines.
Unless you are using Night Fight rules, they are useless.
Warhammer 40,000 was started by Rick Priestly in 1987 as the futuristic companion to Warhammer Fantasy. As of 2008, it has been around for 21 years, and is currently in it's 5th edition of core rules.
Warhammer 40,000 (also called Warhammer 40k) is a table-top strategy game produced by Games Workshop. Games Workshop produce the majority of the miniatures required to play the game, as well as the rules and playing resources required to play it.
Detailed rules differ by state, but here are some general rules. The thrower is forbidden from stepping out of the circle until the official gives him clearance. Some areas allow the thrower to step ON the line as long as he is not OVER the line, but in many areas stepping on the line disqualifies the thrower. The discus must land within the two lines that form the throwing sector. If it lands outside of the line, it is called a scratch-aka it doesn't count. This is another area where the rules change depending on where you are- in some places the throw will count if the disc lands on the line; in other places that throw would be a scratch.