0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.
You are not quite finished ..... need to at the rose bushes at the end of each row. (Sort of like the canary in the coal mine for grape growers)
MAx, that Neolubbed valve gear looks mighty fine (in both meanings of the word)!
Thanks, man! Actually, all the parts are blackened with Jax metal blackener, cut 50/50 with water, sothat the reaction is slow, and all areas of a part have time to get black without the chemicaloverdoing it and causing a layer of blackened metal to flake off, leaving bright shiny metal all over again.That is always an issue with metal blackeners. Some are stronger than others. I do use NeoLube over the blackener. But the blackener makes sure that even if the Neolube wears off here and there,the metal will still be black and look good.
Good info - thanks Max!I've been using the old standby A-West Blacken-it and Micro Engineering's rail weathering solution. I'll have to get me some Jax!One little thing that bugs me in that photo is that the leading truck's wheel faces are just concave with the axle not protruding from the center at all. That just looks weird. Those are probably FVM wheels which seem to have the faces shaped that way. They look good in outside-bearings trucks but inside-bearings show their shortcoming. They still look much better than the original Rivarossi wheels!
That's a good point. I'll see what I can do... Just a small flat disk of something, cemented into the center of the wheel,ought to do the trick.
True, a disc could be glued in place. But the danger is it won't be centered. If that's the case, then we would see those discs moving up and down as they roll down the track.I guess you'd have to put the wheel in a motor tool and true it up after you glue it in place.
For my Spectrum Connie, I just used zuron rail nippers to cut the cone flush, then a couple passes with a flat mill file. Be sure to check the gauge and road test before cutting. I found that with the light front end I had to open the gauge about .001" to keep it from derailing. I followed that up with some passes on hi-grit wet dry to remove the tooling marks. Simple KISS method.The S.
In this case, I somehow thought they were smooth, so I dished them all the way out.
Bremmer: I don't remember ever having them. If I remember right he sold both an SP and a generic version, and for my GN and NP units I bought the generic.