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Vin

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Posts posted by Vin

  1. Hi,

    The TSOT's during the peak of West of Endland usage and in NSE are as follows;

     

    6500

    6501

    6502

    6503

    6513

    6517

    6521

    6522

    6527

     

    All of these were in the NWXX pool at the time and had the full NSE livery. There were variations with the shade of blue and positioning of the numbers/ logos.

     

    I hope this helps.

    Regards

     

    Vin

    • Informative/Useful 2
  2. Hi,

     

    You should be pleased with what you have done. It looks great. The problem with painting is that it can look easy to do but I've been painting locos for over 20 years so have picked up loads of tricks. I've also switched from enamel 10 years ago to acrylics because of the lead in enamels. The switch means drying times are different from one to another but the basics are the same. I have noticed that pigments in enamel blues do seem to have a short shelf life compared to the acrylic ones, I think particles dry within the paint mix and this effects the finish.

    I really do like painting and weathering modern stock in O gauge as it has a presence the smaller scales doesn't seem to have. The only problem is when there is a fault it is almost going to be twice as glaring. I must get back to completing 37423 & the stack of new nameplates as well.

     

    Regards

    Vin

  3. I think you might have a problem disguising the carrier film even with weathering as it has a hard square edge. You could try microsol which is solvent based and basically melts the transfer to the bodyside.

    I have no idea where all the blue class 33's are. Out of over a dozen I've had since introduction I've only had one blue one, the rest being green.

     

    Regards

    Vin

  4. Hi Terry,

    Whilst you had the silver paint out for the window surrounds you should have done all the door handles and buffer shanks. I've also noticed you can still the carrier film on the numbers as it is on a matt base. I also varnish the loco body with matt varnish after applying the decals as it stops them falling off. Looking good and will be even better when running.

     

    Regards

    Vin

  5. Hi Terry,

    That looks good from the photos. At that stage I would now remask the yellow and do a oily black fade on the bottom of the engine room doors and solebar. Then whilst that paint is still wet spray the centre of each panel with a dusting of rail blue. This highlights the faded areas and blends the paint effect.

     

    Good work, regards

    Vin

  6. Hi,

    The ESU decoder I'm going to use in my 37423 build. As for the Heljan class 20 it will be a bit of a squeeze as the smoke generator takes a lot of the room up. Personally the 20 only really needs one motor for most layouts. So keeping the nose end motor as it has the fan directly above it and removing the cab end motor but keeping the pickups will be fine.

     

    Regards

    Vin

  7. Hi Terry,

    The Heljan model is great to work on but they did restrict the number of locos you can model without some alteration. This is because of the cab side windows, they put the none tablet catcher smaller size windows which was only used on two batches of disc fitted class 20's. 20002 is fine as it had this feature and the others are 20001 to 20027 and 20035 to 20069.

     

    Regards

    Vin

     

    P.s. Before you prime the body shells the window apartures need some filing around the inside edge as the glazing is a tight fit without the addition of extra paint layers.

  8. Hi Jeff,

    I have noticed that most of the colours come off when in contact with IPA. Fortunately I use it to remove excess paint whilst weathering. The ones with the least resistance are blacks, greys and blues. A bit more vigour is required for browns and reds.

    I do like the model air range and game air for those non railway colours.

     

    Regards

    Vin

  9. Hi all,

     

    It is really bad when you have hunt in Flickr for your own photos because you cannot find the files in the cloud. Here is 33027 that I did last year with blue faded spray, which was done by spraying a coat of BR blue. Then spraying more coats with white added and others with black misted over. The beauty of 7mm scale locos is that if you use an airbrush with different heads/ needles the spray pattern can be controlled with a lot of accuracy. So first I detail grilles, doors and crevices with a fine head and then coat with the medium or large head. The spray patterns are from a pencil line to a rattle can sizes. Then the over coating with the fades are sprayed whilst wet, which blends the pigments together. I was once asked to de-weather a loco which is impossible with this method as it is a part of the paintwork and not a post paint job weathering effect.

     

    post-11695-0-17312000-1455058269_thumb.jpg

     

    The roof is also fade weathered with about 5 or 6 shades of grey. This method of painting is more commonly used by military modellers for some reason, I have no idea why?

     

    I will have to hunt and resize some more locos and stock.

     

    Regards

    Vin 

     

    P.S. I know it is not a class 20 but this was the first one I came across.

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