On 5th May 2015 I stated that this would be painted alongside the A3. For reasons not relevant to discussion here it wasn't (although I can give chapter and verse if required
). However, as I write this now the loco, tender and various post painting accoutrements are in a washing soda/hot water/aluminium foil bath in the workshop. I suspect that I've already run out of time for the current run of warm weather, but we'll see. In any event, once properly cleaned the loco can be kept warm, dry and dust free until more painting weather arrives. This one will be hand lined - it'll be the third I've done and I'm oh so slow, but the finished article looks much better and more subtle to my eye, and that was the request of club (see below).
Some time ago, and it must have been on this forum as it's the only one to which I pay any attention, there was reference to using Copydex rather than Maskol as a masking agent. I believe that this is because Copydex does not deteriorate over a couple of days, so can be kept in place during the various painting stages. As a recap, this loco is for my club and has been requested as "Evening Star" (I was outvoted - I reckoned black was good!) so I'll have to keep all the pipework and other brassy and coppery bits clean and brassy during priming, painting, masking and painting again. Can it be confirmed that Copydex is the way to go, or should I break out the Maskol? (Which is actually pretty horrible stuff to use on detail parts anyway).
I freely acknowledge that I should have made the pipework removable as a unit which, of course, I would were I building the thing now, but which I've not because I'm still at the back of the class and didn't.................................................................................................................................. think ah........ ead.
Comments, please, and I'll go into town (ho ho - anyone who's been to Tring will understand, but it's the nearest we have) tomorrow and buy some Copydex at enormous expense.
Brian
PS - following my earlier comments about difficulty in finding ancient threads I found this one really easily, so thank you for the advice.