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LSWR 20T Brake Van


ullypug

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Due to a senior moment, I forgot that I'd ordered one of these some time ago from Model Railways Direct. I duly ordered one from Kernow so imagine my surprise when two finally arrived. Hey ho.

As has been documented elsewhere, the colour of these vans looks a little on the light side. As I never saw one in service prior to 1923, I'm not qualified to say whether the LSWR brown is the wrong shade. The general opinion is that it is. Having a second model meant that I was prepared to have a go at doing something about it.

The chassis unscrews with 4 screws and drops away. The false floor then comes away without difficulty. I simply pushed it out by poking a small screwdriver through the veranda opening to tap it out.

The tricky bit is the glazing. Despite my original assumptions, the door ends are not part of the glazing shell and can be removed carefully. The guards look out duckets are part of the glazing shell. Working carefully with a blade, the glue seal can be broken and the glazing can be prised inwards. I found it helpful to snap off the two retaining lugs fitted to the underside of the roof. All in all it took about half an hour to disassemble.

 

The lettering was removed by gentle rubbing with a scratch brush, as my usual method of IPA and cotton buds didn't seem to want to work.

I then brush painted the sides and removed duckets with Vallejo Acrylic Chocolate Brown 70.872 and was able to work around the existing handrails etc. I have no idea how accurate this is but it seems a fair representation. Refer to earlier point about qualifications. I did paint over the tare lettering on the lower plank.

The body was then given a couple of coats of Klear before transfers were applied from an old PC Models set (sheet 13). A couple more coats of Klear to seal and it was time to reassemble. I cut away the nicely moulded stove and handrail from the cabin interior as you can't see it and I wanted to add some lead for additional weight.

 

Taking it a step further, I fitted P4 wheels after first removing the brake gear (this pushes out after breaking the glue join) and cutting a small recess to allow it to go up against the thinned down W irons. These have to have about half a mil taken off for the axles to fit nicely in the new brass bearings.

 

All reassembled, just waiting couplings.

 

 

 

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Edited by ullypug
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7 Comments


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  • RMweb Gold

Lovely work and something I will be doing with my SR example. 

 

Thanks for the top tips. 

 

Is the other one getting the same treatment? 

 

 

 

 

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Wonderful discussion of the dissection of the brake van. 

 

Until I get around to it my examples are doing temporary reverse "Lend Lease" service......

 

1543 Brake Van in SP Service.jpg

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10 hours ago, 46444 said:

Lovely work and something I will be doing with my SR example. 

 

Thanks for the top tips. 

 

Is the other one getting the same treatment? 

 

 

 

 

I will probably paint and letter in SR livery 

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I find it surprising that there isn't enough clearance for P4 wheels (or em for that matter) on modern RTR stuff these days.

 

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4 hours ago, Martin.M said:

I find it surprising that there isn't enough clearance for P4 wheels (or em for that matter) on modern RTR stuff these days.

 

If you just swapped the wheels you’d probably get away with it. I wanted to fit waisted brass bearings though and didn’t have any flangeless ones, hence I had to reduce the W iron by the width of the bearing flange.

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