I promised that I would have a go at building a couple of the kits. I have sufficient parts for a LMS Stanier BTK, a Gresley 61'0" and a number of Thompson coaches.
I though I would start with what I thought would be the easiest, the LMS Stanier BTK. My kit, bought secondhand and not in its original packaging appears complete except the cast duckets are missing.
Some other Thompson's in my possession have had the sides prepainted in the Crimson and Cream and I can certainly see the advantage of detailing, painting and lining the Stanier with the sides flat on the workbench. I could be persuaded otherwise.
Careful examination of the cast ends showed some of the steps were bent out of true and the buffer beam skew whiff (ends before correcting):
Fortunately the allow was mallable enough for me to straighten them with flat nose pliers.
There are some distortions along the stepboard pressing. The appear on ALL kits so must be caused when the parts are clamped for pressing. Sorry for the poor quality image:
This angle shows the issue clearer:
Again a quick tweak with the pliers ane the solebars are straight again:
The sides were rubbed down with a fine decorators block to remove the shine and hopefully give the paint something to key to. In this image the top side has been treated but the lower is still to be done. Hopefully you can just make out the burr caused by the stamping process on the lower side:
In order to scribe the door lines I put a mark on the centre line of the doors. I also noticed from the instructions the need to manually remove some of the cross bars on the windows (marked with an "X"):
These were snipped out with a pair of fine side cutters and the edges dressed with a file:
Finally using the centre markings the door edges were scribed using dimensions from one of David Jenkinson's drawings: 2'0 3/16" for the passenger doors and 4'7 1/2" over the double guard's doors. In practise I rounded these up/down as appropriate:
Next job is to fit hinges then dril and fit handles etc. For the hinges I am thinking of using short lengths of styrene possible held in place with small blobs of epoxy. Once primed and painted I hope these with remain stuck in place.
Out of interest none of the Lawrence built models in my collection have hinges fitted and all handles do not stand proud of the sides, something I might emulate.
Thoughts?