DougN Posted January 30, 2018 Share Posted January 30, 2018 Jesse, those are looking great. I am not sure how your going with paints all I can really get hold of here in Melbourne is Humbrol, Tamyia and other main stream brands but not the Precision paints or Cherry paints as can be helpful for the UK liveries. Next time your heading over to the UK it would be worth stocking up as the retailers can't post to Australia with out ridiculous levels of "hazardous" paperwork. You can bring in small volumes in "checked baggage". I know a reasonable number of people have done this! Next time I think I will be collecting "LNER greens", teak undercoat and the 2 top coats, LNER wagon grey(which seems to be darker) and bauxite, just a tin of each as they last a long time! Thankfully I have enough to keep me going for another 5 years I think so I don't run out as the other half would kill me if I said lets go to the UK as I have run out of paint. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jesse Sim Posted January 30, 2018 Author Share Posted January 30, 2018 Jesse, those are looking great. I am not sure how your going with paints all I can really get hold of here in Melbourne is Humbrol, Tamyia and other main stream brands but not the Precision paints or Cherry paints as can be helpful for the UK liveries. Next time your heading over to the UK it would be worth stocking up as the retailers can't post to Australia with out ridiculous levels of "hazardous" paperwork. You can bring in small volumes in "checked baggage". I know a reasonable number of people have done this! Next time I think I will be collecting "LNER greens", teak undercoat and the 2 top coats, LNER wagon grey(which seems to be darker) and bauxite, just a tin of each as they last a long time! Thankfully I have enough to keep me going for another 5 years I think so I don't run out as the other half would kill me if I said lets go to the UK as I have run out of paint. I know its ridiculous getting anything like that sent here. I'll be over in August so I will stock up then. I have railmatch teak, need some red oxide and grey now. Have to shop around to find a suitable match. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Markeg Posted January 30, 2018 Share Posted January 30, 2018 Hi Jesse, If you need red oxide, Dulux Metalsheild Red Oxide undercoat in a spray can available from Bunnings is a excellent match to Red Oxide of the BR box vans. I will have to check when I next go out to the shed. If it is different title/description I will let you know. Mark Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jwealleans Posted January 30, 2018 Share Posted January 30, 2018 LNER wagon grey(which seems to be darker) I've tried Humbrol 67 which gives a nice dark grey finish, or 106 with some black added. Nick Campling has been telling us for years that LNER wagon grey was close to GWR and Humbrol 67 is quite close to Precision GWR wagon grey. I try to use a slightly different shade on each wagon anyway, it looks more realistic when they're weathered, so mix and match as you can. Jesse, you've only put a 3 link coupling on that fitted van until you get hold of a screw link, am I right? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
DougN Posted January 30, 2018 Share Posted January 30, 2018 Thanks Jonathan, it appears that Humbrol paint is at least one simple standard that is generally available. I'll have to check my paints and have a go on a wagon or 2. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jesse Sim Posted January 30, 2018 Author Share Posted January 30, 2018 I've tried Humbrol 67 which gives a nice dark grey finish, or 106 with some black added. Nick Campling has been telling us for years that LNER wagon grey was close to GWR and Humbrol 67 is quite close to Precision GWR wagon grey. I try to use a slightly different shade on each wagon anyway, it looks more realistic when they're weathered, so mix and match as you can. Jesse, you've only put a 3 link coupling on that fitted van until you get hold of a screw link, am I right? Thanks Jonathan, ill have a look around tomorrow. Yeah I was just checking how it ran under pressure, with other wagons connected to it. I need to find some screw links that are cheap, they were a tad expensive at my local store. They would have been alright if i was buying....one! But, I need a few.....hundred, so need to find somewhere that sells by the pallet. Hi Jesse, If you need red oxide, Dulux Metalsheild Red Oxide undercoat in a spray can available from Bunnings is a excellent match to Red Oxide of the BR box vans. I will have to check when I next go out to the shed. If it is different title/description I will let you know. Mark Cheers Mark, Always love an excuse to go to Bunnings!!!!!! When are the snags on? Jesse Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jesse Sim Posted January 30, 2018 Author Share Posted January 30, 2018 (edited) So depending on what time this uploads, let's say it's around midnight and I just walked in from the Train Room. Geez, after a hard day today working in the heat I thought sitting at my work bench in the air conditioning wasn't a bad idea. I didn't even realise the time until I grabbed my phone to take the following photos. Sorry Mum, sorry dad. Started on another Parkside Kit, a GWR Fish Van. I'll finish it off tomorrow. As I said I didn't realise the time, I decided to start on the Ratio Signal box interior kit. I trimmed down the length of arms needed to suite my needs. I realised there is a stove with a chimney, but the Signal box roof didn't have a chimney. Well, luckily I had my drill handy, hehe!! I will have to cut the plastic chimney supplied and make my own, so its higher. Edited January 30, 2018 by Jesse Sim 5 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jwealleans Posted January 30, 2018 Share Posted January 30, 2018 (edited) Just to follow up on my earlier post, the NB van below has been painted with Humbrol 67. The G2 I think is done with 106. Edited October 15, 2018 by jwealleans 4 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jesse Sim Posted January 30, 2018 Author Share Posted January 30, 2018 I do agree that different shades are better and would look more natural. Have you just brush painted them? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Woodcock29 Posted February 7, 2018 Share Posted February 7, 2018 I've tried Humbrol 67 which gives a nice dark grey finish, or 106 with some black added. Nick Campling has been telling us for years that LNER wagon grey was close to GWR and Humbrol 67 is quite close to Precision GWR wagon grey. I try to use a slightly different shade on each wagon anyway, it looks more realistic when they're weathered, so mix and match as you can. Hi Everyone Jonathan I'm most interested in your comment that Nick Campling has been saying for years that LNER wagon grey was close to GW wagon grey. I've painted most of the LNER unfitted wagons I've built in a mid-lightish grey - mostly using the old Gloy LNER wagon grey which I got probably 35-40 years ago. That colour appears to be very similar to Railmatch LNER wagon grey - I got a bottle of that in the UK last year but haven't actually used any of it yet. I also have some Precision LNER wagon grey, obtained from the estate of one of our BRMA members a few years ago - again I haven't used that but based on the swathe of colour on the lid it appears to be more of a mid to dark grey. I guess in reality the colour varied quite a lot as we have heard many times that old paint residues were tipped into a bucket/bin and used on wagons. I have picked up quite a number of kit-built LNER wagons second-hand over the years from a mate here in Adelaide and he has painted most of those a mid-dark grey so I actually have a vast array of grey colours amongst my stock of LNER wagons. I have had a quick look through David Jenkinson's The Big Four in Colour and from the few glimpses of LNER unfitted wagons in there they appear to be a mid grey which presumably would weather to a lighter colour and or else they have been a darker grey and have now weathered to a mid grey? I wonder which paint I'll use next time I build some unfitted wagons? Andrew Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
richard i Posted February 7, 2018 Share Posted February 7, 2018 Hi Everyone Jonathan I'm most interested in your comment that Nick Campling has been saying for years that LNER wagon grey was close to GW wagon grey. I've painted most of the LNER unfitted wagons I've built in a mid-lightish grey - mostly using the old Gloy LNER wagon grey which I got probably 35-40 years ago. That colour appears to be very similar to Railmatch LNER wagon grey - I got a bottle of that in the UK last year but haven't actually used any of it yet. I also have some Precision LNER wagon grey, obtained from the estate of one of our BRMA members a few years ago - again I haven't used that but based on the swathe of colour on the lid it appears to be more of a mid to dark grey. I guess in reality the colour varied quite a lot as we have heard many times that old paint residues were tipped into a bucket/bin and used on wagons. I have picked up quite a number of kit-built LNER wagons second-hand over the years from a mate here in Adelaide and he has painted most of those a mid-dark grey so I actually have a vast array of grey colours amongst my stock of LNER wagons. I have had a quick look through David Jenkinson's The Big Four in Colour and from the few glimpses of LNER unfitted wagons in there they appear to be a mid grey which presumably would weather to a lighter colour and or else they have been a darker grey and have now weathered to a mid grey? I wonder which paint I'll use next time I build some unfitted wagons? Andrew How clean are the wagons. If clean and mid grey they will lighten to light with age. If dirty then dark grey to mid. If that makes sense. Or would it be the other way around, with darkening over time? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jwealleans Posted February 7, 2018 Share Posted February 7, 2018 This may not be the post I remembered, but it covers the point and broadens it a little. Nick Campling, Dec 2012: Re the shade on LNER wagon grey. I am sure that I have posted this before but possibly not on this forum. The paint for LNER wagons, and many other items, was mixed in a domestic galvanised dustbin, and the painters refilled their kettles from these. Now depending on how often they were stirred, how far down the bin they were and how much had separated out, the rsultant dip could vary considerably from a lighter almost LMS grey to the darker GWR grey. You pays your money and takes your choice. Gloss paints as topcoats did not come in until the late 1930s. Peter Tatlow quotes this same explanation which was originally given to us by the paint shop foreman at the Plant in 1964 who when shown a set of samples of different shades (actually for Humbrol) stated that all five of the shades would be correct and then went on to explain why. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium Barry O Posted February 7, 2018 RMweb Premium Share Posted February 7, 2018 A bit like "battleship grey" the colour depends on lots of variables. Another good reason to have Midland lake or MMS maroon on coaches as they weremixedto a specific set of pigments. Baz Question is is NER coach crimson lake the same colour? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
DougN Posted February 7, 2018 Share Posted February 7, 2018 Barry this is the really big problem that I have been chasing for about 2 months. From your end in the uk it is rover damask red. But fromAustralia I can't find any one that stocks the colour! Ps I hope you had a great trip! Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jesse Sim Posted February 8, 2018 Author Share Posted February 8, 2018 (edited) The signal box has been painted, just waiting for an LED to go in order to get a nice photo Funnily enough when I started painting, with a very small brush, all my mates said it would be easy, so to prove a point I got Mitch, my wiring helper to have a go at painting the bookshelf that went inside. Lets just say that I'm lucky that I'm not modelling a library. Here's the Parkside Bloater fish van from the earlier post... and here it is as of last night, with painting completed and one side of the lettering and weathering all round to go. Edited February 8, 2018 by Jesse Sim 5 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium St Enodoc Posted February 8, 2018 RMweb Premium Share Posted February 8, 2018 Barry this is the really big problem that I have been chasing for about 2 months. From your end in the uk it is rover damask red. But fromAustralia I can't find any one that stocks the colour! Ps I hope you had a great trip! Doug, when I get home at the weekend I'll try to remember to check what I use as an equivalent. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jwealleans Posted February 8, 2018 Share Posted February 8, 2018 (edited) Jesse, you asked about tare weights for the S8 Bloater. I have no GWR literature so I borrowed some when I did these, but the lettering layouts and tares are taken from photographs. (if you can read the back one you have better eyesight than me). Edited May 4, 2018 by jwealleans 3 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium St Enodoc Posted February 12, 2018 RMweb Premium Share Posted February 12, 2018 Doug, when I get home at the weekend I'll try to remember to check what I use as an equivalent. Doug, I use Holts Chianti Red DSC63. It's close enough for me. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium St Enodoc Posted February 12, 2018 RMweb Premium Share Posted February 12, 2018 Jesse, you asked about tare weights for the S8 Bloater. I have no GWR literature so I borrowed some when I did these, but the lettering layouts and tares are taken from photographs. (if you can read the back one you have better eyesight than me). Jesse, your model looks fine but as per Jonathan's photos above you need to add the load capacity (10 tons) and the tare (empty weight). None of the photos I have in books are clear enough to read this but the drawing in Russell's GWR Coaches Part 2 states that the tare is 11 tons 16 cwt. This will vary by a few cwt for individual wagons so use anything that is a few cwt either side of 12 tons, again as Jonathan has done above. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium St Enodoc Posted February 13, 2018 RMweb Premium Share Posted February 13, 2018 Jesse, your model looks fine but as per Jonathan's photos above you need to add the load capacity (10 tons) and the tare (empty weight). None of the photos I have in books are clear enough to read this but the drawing in Russell's GWR Coaches Part 2 states that the tare is 11 tons 16 cwt. This will vary by a few cwt for individual wagons so use anything that is a few cwt either side of 12 tons, again as Jonathan has done above. Here's a photo (provided by bgman of this parish) of a preserved Bloater at Didcot. The tare is 11 t 6 cwt. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jesse Sim Posted February 14, 2018 Author Share Posted February 14, 2018 The paint finally arrived on Monday, so track spraying commenced. Decided on starting at the South end, as there are a few dropper wires that need to be soldered still in the North end. Here's what the track looked like before spraying, with the masking off nearing an end. I spray the sides of the track at a near enough 90 degree angle, with Mitch taking over the other side, (pictured), he still needs some practice though! I found a couple of blank areas he missed, bloody amateurs! That was completed on Tuesday, stage one is complete. The second stage is the painting of the sleepers, by simply spraying directly downward on to the track. Hopefully the sides of the rail are protected and still give off the lighter shade of the first colour. This is the method used by Graham of the Grantham layout, although he sprays his track before pinning it to the baseboards. Mitch thinks he is somewhat of a photographer with all those low level shots! 7 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium St Enodoc Posted February 14, 2018 RMweb Premium Share Posted February 14, 2018 The paint finally arrived on Monday, so track spraying commenced. Decided on starting at the South end, as there are a few dropper wires that need to be soldered still in the North end. Here's what the track looked like before spraying, with the masking off nearing an end. IMG_0588.JPG IMG_0590.JPG I spray the sides of the track at a near enough 90 degree angle, with Mitch taking over the other side, (pictured), he still needs some practice though! I found a couple of blank areas he missed, bloody amateurs! IMG_0624.JPG IMG_0592.JPG That was completed on Tuesday, stage one is complete. IMG_0604.JPG The second stage is the painting of the sleepers, by simply spraying directly downward on to the track. Hopefully the sides of the rail are protected and still give off the lighter shade of the first colour. This is the method used by Graham of the Grantham layout, although he sprays his track before pinning it to the baseboards. IMG_0606.JPG IMG_0617.JPG IMG_0619.JPG Mitch thinks he is somewhat of a photographer with all those low level shots! What paint is it Jesse? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium TrevorP1 Posted February 18, 2018 RMweb Premium Share Posted February 18, 2018 The paint finally arrived on Monday, so track spraying commenced. Decided on starting at the South end, as there are a few dropper wires that need to be soldered still in the North end. Here's what the track looked like before spraying, with the masking off nearing an end. Interested in the way you're doing this Jesse. I'm watching the techniques of others while I'm waiting for a property to be sold before I can start my re-start project. I like your railway room as well, steam trains, fast cars, piston engine aircraft! Yes! Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jesse Sim Posted February 18, 2018 Author Share Posted February 18, 2018 What paint is it Jesse? Hiya John, sorry for the lateness, it's Humbrol Matt 29 for the sides and Tamiya TS-1 red brown for the tops. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jesse Sim Posted February 18, 2018 Author Share Posted February 18, 2018 Interested in the way you're doing this Jesse. I'm watching the techniques of others while I'm waiting for a property to be sold before I can start my re-start project. I like your railway room as well, steam trains, fast cars, piston engine aircraft! Yes! Thanks Trevor, I have only copied the work of a friend, however he sprays his track before laying it. I prefer to spray it once it has already been laid, as then all of the plastic joiners, metal joiners, soldered dropper wires, etc etc, are painted over. Both still work effectively. Cheers for the comments, I do like my cars, anything old for a matter of fact. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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