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First off, thanks, and I love the photos.+1 upvote (wait, the voting is gone?)I am curious what you will paint them with, and how well it sticks for you. I tried some of the brick paving rollers(I have all 3 styles) with the terra cotta colored clay, and it was not dark enough. So I hit it with some acrylic, easy peasy. But when I went to clean the tracks, I rubbed off the paint too. But my experiment was a small one, and I suppose I could always just wipe the railheads with alcohol to prevent "scraping" of the paint.My planned solution is to use their black and white clay mixed(already acquired), to get good base grey color for pavement, thinking even if I do paint it, any missing paint will just look like damaged asphalt.
Not that I used clay or the rollers but I have done a ton of street trackage in plaster and joint compound, as far as cleaning goes I would say you need to make the rails proud of the paving medium enough for a bright boy or whatever your choice of cleaning abrasive is, then the paint removal is much less of an issue.
The pavement rollers don't exactly make this possible. I thought about chucking them into a drill and using a needle file to deepen the rail grooves. But, if the rail sits above the pavement surface, it also ruins the effect IMHO, YMMV.
I think in my era maybe 5 pr 6 people lived along the RGS. I can actually model them! I do know sheep vastly out numbered humans in all of the counties served by the RGS, which meant the dating scene was...well...
Oh?