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A suggestion by @mark dance gave me the solution to a perfect river bed. The freshly laid Fraser River and a 100 or so more trees.
Doug, I just used leveling cement and poured it out on the base, which in my case was plywood. It self-levels and leaves a good smooth surface for painting. I made temporary dams on the edges with paper towel and cardboard that I clamped on but I think I would use wax paper next time. It is really easy to use, but comes in 50 lb bags. My pour was about 5 lbs and is 3-4 mm thick.
Thanks for the info on the dullcoat. I will do some experiments on some scrap styrene to see if I have anything I can seal it with when I get to that point.
Did this as an experiment for a customer and it's worked a little better than I thought.1) Take one of the TU7T's chassis with the 3.5v pager motor, and replace it with a Kato 12V 11-105 motor (which is like several others now)The Shapeways shell is made as a dummy, takes some modification and tinkering, but other than the coupler pockets, works even though the motor barely fits. The real trick is filling every available spot with lead.Customer wanted an Aarmco Steel color scheme, made the decals. I have a video of this running but it will be a day or so before I process it.This is intended as an operating, functional tiny switcher - not a novelty, so performance and tractive effort first. Specific goals for number of cars, slow-speed, pickup, and delay uncoupling were met.