Dear all, given that I’ve not reported much of late, nor achieved all that much to be honest... there’s quite a bit to be done outside of modelling at the moment, so life is, as usual, taking priority. However, despite this some progress has been made.
The bogies were separated again, and the wheel rims masked... and sides treated to an airbrushed coat of weathered black... and then some brakedust mixed with track dirt was dusted over this. The bogie towers have had their copper pick up strips painted black and are all now reassembled ready for loco assembly and finishing (including sanding pipe fitting – to be done last).
I’ve also been working on the cab interiors. On my last projects, I set about painting these as accurately as possible, but given that the cabs fitted to the 8-pin chassis are, er, basic... and wrong... the painting gave a feel to the interior but no accuracy . The cab on the 21-pin chassis is better, but the bulkhead is still wrong. You’ve seen the bulkheads in an earler post... and yes, I’ve now got a taller driver, and secondman to fit – once painted up (another job) but I wanted the cab interior to look... well, just a bit better. The pics here show the result of this work... based on photos from Brian Daniels detail photos sets (see class 55 group details thread), some filing (actually a lot of filing) and plasticard, plastic rod, microstrip and wire additions later and we have this as the result. I scouted around for a handbrake wheel and was rather drawn to Colin Cragg’s items, but having discussed this with him by e-mail (thanks Colin for the prompt responses ) we realised that the wagon handwheels would all be a bit big. I therefore took a deep breath and separated the body and chassis from my 21-pin Class 55 (55008) that sits weathered on my photoplank on a shelf above my desk (with 55015 and my first 55020 for company) and removed the handbrake wheels... I don’t really peer in to the cab anyway (or so I convinced myself)... I can always replace it if something becomes available. This was mounted to a .4mm brass wire shaft and stuck into a hole drilled through the bulkhead – as seen in the result. Dials are currently just drilled out “a bit†and the new shape means that when fitted the AWS control box (is that what it is?) is just about visible from outside (as it should be) in the middle of the facia. Second cab can be seen in the photos as a “work in progress†– it’s a nice modelling task to work on in the evenings! And yes, the phone handset cord is there – but no, I decided not to coil it (I’m not that mad)
Finally, there is the painting..! Something that I said I was not looking forward to. Well, the loco was treated to Halfords grey primer and railmatch white primer at the ends... I then practiced the art of airbrushing (properly) on my two coach bodies... and this looked ok – the yellow ends weren’t bad... but I must have bottled it a bit when I turned to the 55 ends, and sprayed very cautiously into the nooks and crannies... and never really opened up the paint flow fully. Result: a less than satisfactory finish! The first coat went on reasonably well... having read comments elsewhere, I laid down a coat of Humbrol yellow first... as the pigment sits better... and this was ok. The darker railmatch yellow was the problematic layer... and once dry, i had to sand off a lot of this with some careful use of 1200 and 2000 grade paper... getting back to a reasonable finish for another try.
This time, I had another go with the coaches... and as you can see, I gave the white roof’d one a good going over, this is the shinier side, resulting from putting plenty of paint down, by opening up the paint delivery nozzle (I pulled back further on the trigger)... got it plenty wet and it flowed.
I then tried this on the front of the 55... and whilst it was not possible to deliver quite so much in a curved (multi-faceted) location, the result was better than before. I will now let this dry thoroughly, rub down the remaining few slightly rough bits and give a good final coat (once back from hols next week). Well, I was aiming for perfection, but I’m no Ian Rathbone (with more practice maybe), so I’ll settle for an achievable result and make sure that the final finish is one that can withstand reasonable inspection if not expert scrutiny. So, here are a few photos.
Now, it could just be me... but I can’t help thinking how nice Deltics might have looked in railfreight grey... this may be as close as mine gets to that livery!
This painting lark has been another challenge to overcome... and with a few setbacks and reconsiderations.., and then some more practice, I think that I can now see how to proceed and get some half decent results. Reading Ian Rathbone’s “Painting and Lining†from time to time certainly helps, although I do find myself marvelling at some (all actually) of the photos in that book – the painting of those models is just superb... something to aim for maybe
Well, my next post will be a while off, but I’ll grab one more evening’s work on those cabs (hopefully) before my boys experience their first 140mph+ journey down to and through the big tunnel that takes us through to “the foreign†for a few days.
Thanks for reading, Au revoir.
- 5
10 Comments
Recommended Comments
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now