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FWIW, this is my track-painting routine. First, I spray-bomb (rattle can) all track with ruddy brown primer--this is mostly for the sake of the rail. Then I randomly brush on white acrylic paint and India Ink washes (thinned with alcohol) on the ties individually or in small bunches. Given that yours is a different type of railroad, however, this approach may not be appropriate. As always, YMMV.
Pete, did it occur to you that maybe I used those turnouts just to make my track look better?
Next question will be track paint colors. I have Rail Tie Brown and Grimy black and am inclined to use them since this is a test board only. And that could be its own test, colors. I am inclined to air brush the whole thing with Grimy Black and then Tie Brown on just the ties. Manual brush detailing could be practiced too. I want to use them because it's what I have but wonder if they'll be unsightly wrong. Besides, I don't know where to get paisley paint.
And I've found a ton of other uses for it. Because it will hold 1/8" shafts, you can use anything you use with your Dremel on the milling machine. If I need to thin the walls of a shell, I put in the 1/4" dremel sanding drum, turn the speed down to as low as it will go, and the mill gives me the control to precisely mill .1mm off the sides of the shell. No more hand-holding the shell and praying.John C.
Sooo, ideas for ballast that's more dirt than ballast?
Dremel sells a solid carbide 1/8 helical cutter/grinder with about 3/4" of cutting lenght that slowed down would work perfect for this with less heat on the plastic and would also allow you to get much closer to end walls and obstructions inside the shell.https://www.dremel.com/en_US/products/-/show-product/tools/9901-tungsten-carbide-cutter
But I just don't get the c40 retrofit as not only is it closer to scale (height) but smaller head. The Rokuhan, märklin and Peco are huge head, compared to MTL (and c40)