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Saturday, July 9, 2022

Maybe a change of clothes is needed?

One thing about military uniforms is that they look smart on the parade ground but once out in the field they do get dirty and especially in combat conditions. The four, so far, headless tankers that come with the MiniArt Egyptian T34 tank had been painted in a shade of sand colour. This needed to be 'dirtied' as it was parade ground clean and the creases and folds in the clothes highlighted with shadow.

I initially used some Vallejo Game Wash that is a brownish colour. I did not dip the figures in this as the jar suggests but painted it on.

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

Leaving that to dry, I thin used a coat of thinned black paint to further highlight the shadows and creases in the clothes.

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

Finally I used a dilute coat of the base sand colour to harmonise the brown and black washes which appears to have been successful. I also used a light grey wash over the boots so that they look suitably dirty as well. Once back at base this crew will no doubt welcome a change of clothes given how dirty they have become!
  
MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

Friday, July 8, 2022

Eating ice cream!

Summer finally appears to have arrived here in the UK. Hot weather means time for an ice cream and one of Mrs. Woody and mine favorites is the Magnum Ice Cream - other similar ice cream products are available, etc., etc, and we have consumed a few of these over the last few days. As the Magnum ice cream is basically a chocolate covered ice cream on a wooden stick, once consumed the wooden stick has a model making use. Handy as I will explain! 

Having seen examples from other modellers, these sticks can be used to fasten model figures to making the painting task much easier by providing a stable means of holding the figure steady. By using a blob of superglue on the soles of the boots of the figures they can be quickly glued to the wooden stick and more importantly, because of the nature of superglue, easily snapped off when needed. 

I had used some acrylic putty to fill some poor fitting joints on the figures and these were cleaned up ready for a repaint.

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

Having all four figures glued to the wooden sticks, it was an easy job to paint in the uniforms, hands and boots as well as the heads and helmets which are still on their sprue.

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

Think I will have another ice cream now that is done!

Thursday, July 7, 2022

Taking stock.

A busy day at the Rocks by Rail Museum where my culinary skills were put to use again in providing snacks and beverages to our visitors. The day continued busy with other things so no model making time at all. However I did have time to take stock of what is on the WMD workbench so to speak.

Anyone having read this blog will have no doubt deduced that I jump from project to project with several on the go at any one time and glacial progress in their completion. Those with any sense of organisation will no doubt shake their head at my unorganised World. However I do on occasions take stock of where I am and make plans to actually move projects on and finish them. This is usually initiated by me realising my working area is becoming a tip! In this case though my whole Man Cave AKA The Room of Gloom is also becoming a tip. Now whilst Mrs. W rarely visits the WMD HQ nerve center to make comment on the state of my domain I do have some pride - honest!

At the moment I am getting close to finishing my build of the MiniArt Egyptian T34 tank. However on the side lines still awaiting finishing is the Heller Scania 144 LB It is so near to being finished and yet I have left it sitting there awaiting the final work on the cab.

Heller Scania 141 LB

Then there is the 009 narrow gauge layout which again is so close to being finished. The various sub assemblies that I have worked on for the last six months need a little bit more work and then mounting to the baseboard and the track needs ballasting. A few other details added would see that substantially finished.

Then there is the 00 gauge layout - My Last Great Project - which whilst I can run trains round it is a long way off being finished and yet it is the central part of much of my modelling interest in railways.  

So my main aim over the next few weeks is to get the two kits and the 009 narrow gauge layout complete and then have a good sort out and tidy up. Once done I should feel rejuvenated to get on with My Last Great Project.  That is my plan in the calm of my mind away from WMD HQ but you never know where that plan will be at when I have time to take stock again!


Wednesday, July 6, 2022

Laid back!

With all that is going on the Country and the World, here at WMD HQ, Milly and Matty cats have a very laid back approach to it all - maybe we can all learn from them?

Laid back cat

Laid back cat

I did have a bit of a laid back day too and relaxed with a bit of progress on the MiniArt T34 Egyptian tank. 

Strangely the whilst the kit has the towing eye pieces for the tow cables you have to supply your own cable. Luckily in my stock of useful items that might be handy one day I had a length of multi strand electrical cable that was just right. A bit of super glue on the ends of the cable attached them to the towing eyes. 

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

The cables together with the gun and shovel have been primed and the two turret hatches have been given a top coat.

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

The turret itself has also had its top coat applied and I am pleased with that and especially the welded seam that I applied which was absent from the kit moulding. I have seen in the close up photo an area that requires a little more smoothing out but I am laid back about that! With the wheels painted up and a few bits left to add to the main hull it should not be too long before the whole tank is painted but in my laid back approach learnt from the cats what is the rush! Oh yes! Mrs. Woody's ever expanding list of jobs for me that is not a matter to be laid back about!

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank


Tuesday, July 5, 2022

Bacon cob!

I went to the Rocks by Rail Museum today expecting to be reunited with the lawn mower. Instead we had an influx of visitors early on and three were asking if the cafe was open and could they have bacon cobs. For anyone reading this wondering what a bacon cob is it is a bread roll with fried bacon and it is almost a national dish in the UK! Ever the obliging I volunteered in the absence of our normal cafe culinary guru to make them. Well that started it didn't it! Once the smell of bacon gets in the air everyone wants one. I ended up making 16 plus about 30 cups of tea and coffee. They seemed to go down well with no complaints. However the time taking to cook, wash up and clean up meant that before I knew it the time was 3pm so no grass cutting today! Unfortunately I have volunteered to cover the cafe on Thursday so there will be more bacon cobs to cook!

I did however grab a few minutes before leaving to do one of those unique things that railway modellers can not very often do. This is Graham the 0-4-0 Sentinel made by Hornby following them measuring up the loco at the museum.

Hornby Sentinel

As I highlighted in a post a few days ago, the real Graham is undergoing maintenance but that did not stop me posing my model of Graham on the real Graham!

Hornby Sentinel

Hornby Sentinel

Back at WMD HQ I had a few minutes to give a coat of primer to the turret of the MiniArt Egyptian T34 tank. Hopefully some final colour will go on during the next few days. Now it is time to cook dinner - bacon cobs Mrs. Woody?

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank


Monday, July 4, 2022

I'm not really a welder!

Although I have in the past been known to use a MIG welder my skills were such that I blew more holes in the metal to be joined then actually welded the metal together. However that does not stop me from making model welds. The turret of the MiniArt T34 Egyptian tank is missing a major weld around the bottom part of the turret. I could have left this and ignored the issue but in the desire to create something a bit more than the box provided I glued some very thin plastic strip, from my stock of such items, to the turret in the required places.

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

Once stuck on I then applied some plastic glue to the top of the strip to soften it. With the back of a scalpel blade I then literally pushed into the semi soft plastic to produce ridges to replicate a welded seam.

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

I need to do a bit more to it but it is beginning to look like a welded seam - not bad for someone who can't weld!.

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

I also managed to paint one side of the wheels in their proper colour which is brining this project along.

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank


Sunday, July 3, 2022

Sunday variety!

Well it was a Sunday of variety. An early morning bike ride bringing my total for this year to 2907miles followed by a trip to the Rocks by Rail Museum having left Mrs. Woody with breakfast in bed. That should earn me some bonus points which may go someway to cancelling all the negative points I seem to earn on a regular basis! Today I was helping out on the Driver for a Fiver day at the Museum. I am not let loose on the locomotive but I am let loose to collect money which may say something about me and how my museum colleagues see me!

It was a steady day of guests but perhaps not as busy as we thought it might be. Whether that is down to potential visitors feeling the squeeze on their pockets and disposable income with the rising cost of living or whether it was the rain late this afternoon we do not know but things will perhaps get clearer as the year progresses. We did have a group of cyclists in this afternoon who came for the cafe and once fed and watered set off only to return five minutes later as the rain came in. In the best traditions of weathering out the rain they consumed some more drinks and cakes and one lady even bought a jig saw and book from our sales stand! The cash till benefitted greatly!

Rocks by Rail Museum

Back at WMD HQ I have primed the other side of the Egyptian T34 tank wheels as well as giving the headless tankers a base coat of sand coloured paint for their uniforms.

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

Other than bringing some colour to a model, putting a light coloured coat of paint on does highlight any areas that are perhaps not as well assembled as they might be! I am trying to be polite in describing my own incomitance! An example is the figure below where the left shoulder as you look at the figure does not quite line up with the body. I will need to use some filler or putty to rectify that as once you notice something it sticks out every time you look at the model. The other three figures will no doubt have similar issues so I will need to look closely at those when I have time and before I progress with anymore painting. 

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank


Saturday, July 2, 2022

Slow Saturday!

Sometimes you have a day when you just do not achieve very much. Today was one of those days. I guess with all that has been going on in Mrs. Woody and my lives over the past few weeks it does catch up with you and the body and mind says its time for a rest. So, not a lot done but Mrs. Woody did get a SubWay sandwich for lunch and I did manage to put a coat of black primer on the Egyptian tankers as well as one side of all the wheels. 


MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

It will be a busier day tomorrow as I am at the Rocks by Rail Museum helping with the Driver for a Fiver day. With the price of fuel going up this event becomes better value every time it is run!

Friday, July 1, 2022

Dual tracks!

Having completed the first of the tracks for the Egyptian T34 tank I was not looking forward to doing the other one as I would need to temporarily fasten wheels to the tank hull with all the issues that I described a couple of days ago. However, there was a moment of inspiration! In my working smarter not harder mood I thought that I could use the first track as a templet for the second track by using masking tape. The photos probably describe it better than my words can so here they are!

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

MiniArt Egyptian T34/85 tank

There are few loose and slightly mis-aligned joints but I can fettle those but other wise I'm pleased with that! Result!

Thursday, June 30, 2022

Accurascale Deltic.

I succumbed to this after literally years looking at the website on the progress Accurascale were making with this long awaited project which was heralded as being the best Deltic ever produced. The Deltic is one of those iconic diesels that replaced steam and took British Rail passenger traffic into the 80s when the HST's took on that role. It is popular with many railway enthusiasts so the model had to be special to meet up to the makers claims. Have those claims been fulfilled in the final model? Well like many others who have received their models you cannot be anything but impressed. The packaging is superb. The accompanying literature is fully detailed and comes complete with a sheet of alternative head codes. The model itself is hefty at about 800g or just under two pounds for those of us with long memories. As you start looking at the model itself you realise this is something else. For the price or even less than the price of some Hornby and Bachmann locos you get a level of detail I have never seen on a mass produced model.

Accurascale green Deltic

Accurascale green Deltic

It looks great but start moving in to see just how detailed this is.

Accurascale green Deltic

Accurascale green Deltic

Sprung buffers compliment the model but things like the finesse of the windscreen wipers, the sliding cab windows, the way the door is correctly recessed are all things that you really do not find that well done on other models.

Move in closer still and you see the chains that run between the bogies and the body which I have never seen modelled before. You also see the manufacturers plate above the loco number and through the window the dtail inside the engine compartment.

Accurascale green Deltic

However the biggest surprise is the cab. My camera is not good at close up shots but this photo at least shows the level of detail just in the cab. Regulator, recessed dials, doors for the electrical cabinets. If there were such a thing as a 4mm real life driver I think they would be fully at home in that cab!

Accurascale green Deltic

I have the DCC sound version and the sound of the real Napier engines is fully captured. They really have a unique tone.

Any downsides? Well I have to be honest and say on unpacking there were a couple of small detail parts that needed to be reattached. After some running I have also collected four other detail parts that need to be reattached. And this is the quandary. If we want models this well detailed they are going to be fragile and parts will fall off if they are used which is something your 1980 Hornby Deltic would be hard pressed to replicate as there was only the body moulding with no other detail to fall off. 

I am not sure where I stand on this quandary but for the moment I am just going to enjoy this model and appreciate the detail it has.