I was keen to complete a model to display at the New England Convention. One that I've been eager to build was one of the two Mike McCormac Models LFX kits I bought some time ago. I saw the effort Mike put into the design of these kits and the accuracy he was aiming for and knew they would be a joy to build.
I did get the kit to a stage where I could display it at Armidale, but I didn't finish all of the windows or the weathering. More on that later.
As I expected, the kit does go together beautifully - everything fits so nicely. There are some steps that are quite fiddly, but the design is well thought-out and the result is worth the effort. There were a few times where I was crawling around on the floor trying to find a tiny brass part which had been ejected from the tweezers...
Here is a photo of a trial fit of the roof in the body.
Here is one of the bogie assemblies,which are a combination of brass etches, lost wax and epoxy castings. They run very nicely and are highly detailed.
I was quite satisfied with the paint job - seems that I'm starting to master the air brush at last.
After this, the decals were applied and a coat of Dullcote applied.
All was going very nicely. but after finishing the second side I turned the model back over and found that my beautiful paint job had turned white! I think the enamel thinners had reacted with the Dullcote, and resulted in a white, chalky finish.
I tried a few methods to get the chalk off, including enamel thinners which ate through the paint and removed a decal. A few swear words were uttered. Weathering is normally pretty tolerant to disasters, but this was getting ridiculous!
I found that scrubbing with a fairly stiff brass brush got rid of most of the chalk, but left enough on to provide a weathered, sun-bleached finish, It looked quite good! Saved!
This is pretty much the state the model was displayed in at Armidale:
Cheers for now
James