Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
God bless TCA 05-58541 Benefactor Member of the NRA, Member of the American Legion, Retired Boss Hog of Roseyville , KC&D Qualified
brianel, Agent 027
"Praise the Lord. I may not have everything I desire, but the Lord has come through for what I need."
I've read the entire thread and have just two questions.
First some background info. I have a 2036 from my youth with the usual assorted chips and scratches. I wanted to cover up some of them so I used Testors flat black. However, the painted spots looked duller than the rest of the body. I then tried Testors gloss black. It makes it look like new but looks shiner than it did. What is the right finish? Are these locos flat or gloss? (I didn't paint the catcher, nose or box near the rods)
Second question, if I wanted to re-do it do you suggest stripping it down or re-paint over existing paint/finish?
Or am I making more of this than necessary?
Suggestions or guidance would be appreciated.
Doug Murphy 'We few, we happy few, we band of brothers...' Henry V.
ezmike: Using the little bottles of Testor's, mix the flat and the gloss about 50-50. In my experience, the exact mix isn't critical, though you might find differently.
When only a small amount is needed, I just use a toothpick to drip some drops onto a piece of aluminum foil, then stir them together. Use a brush (or a Q-tip) to apply to the edges of the running board, window ledges on the cab, etc. Large areas of flat surfaces (like big chips on the boiler or the roof of the cab) require a more sophisticated technique to get a really good result, but if you just want to cover up the scratches, it's not hard at all, even with this low-tech approach.
A blanket answer would be oversimplification. A lot depends on what you want and your expectations. This is the classic operator or collector and which side of the fence you lean on. I personally do not consider resale of my pieces. With this in mind, I do with them pretty much as I want. If resale is an issue, the decision become much more complicated. Original finish with blemishes is worth more to some than an excellent restoration.
Jim
I love to re-do my old trains. For me that is part of the fun.
New side rods,paint,chimney ring,headlightlens,front truck wheels and tender decal. All from Olsens
May make it worth less, but they're my toys, so who cares!
injuneer wrote: I love to re-do my old trains. For me that is part of the fun.New side rods,paint,chimney ring,headlightlens,front truck wheels and tender decal. All from OlsensMay make it worth less, but they're my toys, so who cares!
that 221 looks sweet. I scoure the junk boxes for treasures. The scratches are a testmonity(sp) to the joy some child had with it. Some guys pay extra for "weathering". I pay less for it. I've rebuilt several locomotives, and I've only felt the need to reapint one.
Dave
It's a TOY, A child's PLAYTHING!!! (Woody from Toy Story)
These 3 photos say it all for me. After going on 17 years back in the hobby, if I had waited for Lionel, K-Line or MTH to make these cars in these particular traditional sizes in these roads, I'd STILL be waiting. For me, repainting is fun and makes the hobby affordable. And it suits my artistic/designer impulses. It's not that I don't like older rail lines... it's just I like the new ones too. So repainting has become an utter necessity until more of the companies come to their senses and realize there actually IS a market for starter sized cars and locos in current modern road names.... I know there is for all the many comments I get about these when I display them at shows.
Thanks guys, I get the feeling the concensus is do what I want. Just for my information, is the original finish a flat black, a gloss black or as one described, a mixture of both?
The gloss does look pretty cool and the flat did look different from the rest of the loco, but thruth be told, it will be running on my lay out not on display.
If you are painting the whole locomotive, Krylon Semi-Flat Black is a great match. You could also spray some into a cup or jar and apply it with a brush if you are just touching up chips.
aboard!
Same me, different spelling!
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