Hi all
So you may remember I had a mass spray booth session whilst my wife was away for the weekend a while ago (link HERE).
Well I've now started on the tracks - 14 pairs in all - and a few associated odds and sods. As a result of having so many sets I'm having a go at using various techniques - some old, some completely new and some a mixture of old and new. A few are finished, most are part way through and a few are still to be started. Some will work out and some won't but it would have been rude not to have experimented with so many sets available to work on
One of the new techniques I am try is this, from the inimitable Night Shift (and yes I do have the set he recommends):
ACW as usual but just remember these are for wargaming with my son.
Andrew
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The main bulk of what I'm working on.

The below are finished (not the orange looking ones!!!), using my 'non-rusty and clean' track technique.


So you may remember I had a mass spray booth session whilst my wife was away for the weekend a while ago (link HERE).
Well I've now started on the tracks - 14 pairs in all - and a few associated odds and sods. As a result of having so many sets I'm having a go at using various techniques - some old, some completely new and some a mixture of old and new. A few are finished, most are part way through and a few are still to be started. Some will work out and some won't but it would have been rude not to have experimented with so many sets available to work on
One of the new techniques I am try is this, from the inimitable Night Shift (and yes I do have the set he recommends):
ACW as usual but just remember these are for wargaming with my son.
Andrew
-----------------------------------------------------------------
The main bulk of what I'm working on.
The below are finished (not the orange looking ones!!!), using my 'non-rusty and clean' track technique.
- It also works well for other metallic finishes e.g. tools, hedgerow cutters etc.
- A base coat of black primer, then a very thin coat of Humbrol enamel gun metal (H53) and finally a thin coat, or two, or three depending on taste, of a very dark brown (Revell acrylic Black and Dark Earth roughly 1:4).
The Polish TKS 'Engine block' (I use the term very loosely) had a thin coat of my special 'Off Black' (black and dark earth @ 1:1) after this shot was taken just to darken it up a bit. - I think it works well, at least for wargaming, and like all best ideas I stumbled on it by accident when trying to correct a foul up in my early modelling days and have developed it since them
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