G3 Mid Wales Railway Brake Van/LBSC 4 ton ballast wagon.

Jon Nazareth

Western Thunderer
Arty
That looks very good! I hate to say this but, I think that the LBSCR goods colour was, for early wagons, lavender grey. When Stroudley took over it became grey.

Jon

P.S. Where did you get the pinky colour from? That could be the colour that I need for my SER stepped wagon.
 

Arty

Western Thunderer
Well according to Southern wagons vol 2, vermillion was applied to engineering dept brakes and ballast wagons up to 1895, and as they were ED wagons, my excuse was that they were never re-painted before they were outlawed as dumb buffered wagons and sold off for private use. Vermilion sounds a bit too bright to me, so I’ve used Halfords red primer.
 

Arty

Western Thunderer
No matter Jon, I was dithering over grey/red, but as grey is so tedious I thought a bit of colour would be good. I have a couple of Midland wagons and a brake which really should be grey.
Although looking at the few pictures of the ballast wagons, they just look bleached out.
And presumably the paint they were using didn’t weather very well.
 

Dog Star

Western Thunderer
That does look like spent (aka "dirty") ballast, please tell us what you have used / done to achieve the effect.

What keeps the doors closed?
 
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Hi everyone. I've just come to join in the fun.
I was delighted to read about your experiences and kind comments with my kits. As some if you know I started making 16mm and 10mm kits mainly for my own amusement, but ended up a slave to a certain friendly pressure group in G3.
The kits are rescaled from 10mm as are my latest 7mm ones.
Occasionally glitches occur with tabs and slot sizes, but they can then be corrected.
Jon asked me thus morning about the WCR wagon modified by Richard to a curved end version.
I rather like it too, so will add the extra curved planks in the next kits - if anyone is interested?
I'll do the same in 10mm and 7mm.
 

Arty

Western Thunderer
Good to see you on here David, I think your kits have a lot to offer in all the scales.
They let your imagination run riot with industrial type wagons, and allow you to make a rake of wagons rather than an isolated example, which is much more prototypical.
I shall be making more of the 4ton minerals of varying versions - end door, side door, rounded end planks etc.
They also allow you to use outdated detail parts like safety chains, dodgy brake gear.

Gauge 3 is a bit of a niche area of railway modeling, because it doesn't lend itself to "indoor" layouts, but using light railways/industrial prototype, all becomes possible - I'm afraid Pacifics and long shiny express trains leave me cold.

Richard
 
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