I've been modelling in various formats for most of my life and have done plenty of plastic kits, 3d prints, and now even scratch building, but something I had always feared like the plague was
etched brass
I'm not really sure why I had such an aversion to it, perhaps because as a 10-ish year old I bought an N gauge kit for a brass class 04, didn't really understand what it was, and ended up with a glue-covered pile of mangled metal. I also think there's something quite daunting about the prospect of turning something so two-dimensional into a 3d object, and which I struggled to get my head around. Then there's the whole world of chassis building, horn blocks, continuous springy bits etc. which I still don't really understand.
I've been wanting to try some etched brass for about a year now. I considered the Connoisseur kits starter loco, but I don't really have much call for O gauge stock (I do have some stock but no plans for a layout). I eventually settled on building a coach or van, and the Roxey Mouldings range looked just the ticket. I literally went to the stand at the Uckfield show and asked which of their kits was easiest, and the answer was the SECR grande vitesse van. I'm very pleased with that choice as the kit so far has been very well designed and the instructions super clear.
So here it is. I still have to figure out:
- the roof
- getting the bolts that retain the body to actually fit through the holes in the underframe (the body is just sitting on the underframe in the below photos)
- Axleboxes, buffers etc.
And then there's lining! I may go with the simplified SECR livery used during/post WW1, as this should be the simplest possible livery.
For a first etched kit, I'm very pleased with it. I made some mistakes along the way, and the brake rigging is a bit of a solder-y mess, but everything is square and the joints are all flush.
So why now? Well the next project will require the construction of some lovely little etched brass industrials, in particular a High Level Neilson (on order). It'll be a while until I embark on that though, practice makes perfect and all!
Will