Yorkshire Dave
Western Thunderer
paint drying out on the brush too quickly
Is this is with acrylics? If so you can always use a retarder to slow the drying time.
paint drying out on the brush too quickly
Ian
How did you go about painting the ironwork on the Gloucester? I have problems with the paint drying out on the brush too quickly together with an inconsistency in paint finish.
Jon
Jon,
The ironwork was done with a 2/0 Humbrol brush, with Precision dull black enamel well stirred and straight from the tin. I painted each strap as thickly as I dared without the paint flowing over the edges . For the corner plates I went round the edges with the 2/0 and then filled in with a #8 flatie quickly before the edges dried. The photo is fairly flattering as to the final finish mind. I find with hand painting like this speed is of the essence to get each area covered while still wet, so each bit blends wet into wet like in water colouring. However if at the end things are a bit patchy from dull to shiny, a quick blow over with some satin or matt varnish/lacquer will soon even it all out. Took about two hours of a rainy Bank holiday afternoon with nothing else to do ........
Cheers HTH Ian
Ian, thanks for explaining your method and,
Ian, thanks for yours. The idea of using a bow pen first and then a brush sounds very interesting. I've never painted straps because of the difficulty in getting up to the edge/going over the and making a pig's ear of the whole thing. What sort of a pen do you have?
Jon
It does run better, but only when the track is clean, which led to another job. Some sort of track cleaning vehicle. Well after looking at various proprietry solutions I decided the simplest was worth a try and an LGB track cleaning attachment was purchased. This is intended to be fixed under a standard LGB wagon. Looking round for a suitable G3 vehicle I found most of my wagons had brake gear in the way of fitting the device. I then remembered that the first G3 wagon I had built/converted was an LGB van which never got fitted with brakes. That would do .....










I'd be tempted to try and filter anything out of the water - bits of bugs and grit (given its a coal fired engine, there will be plenty of that about) are a right pain in pumps and clack valves.