

All I did was knock the other guy's weathering off a bit with wire wool, some mechanical work changing over from P48 to O Scale, a couple touch ups and repainted his replacement coaming piece to represent a fresh repair.
I like wire wool for both weathering and for relettering cars, both plastic and brass. The old excuse about not trying any weathering because of the fear of ruining the paint job really melts away once you get used to using fine wire-wool to both remove "over-weathering" and to emphasise the high spots like ribs and ladders (just as nature does) by working with it in the same direction as rain does. You can not only recover a paint job that the weathering was poorly done on but make that poor job suddenly an outstanding one just by rubbing things down gently with #0 or#00 wire wool. If it doesn't work, well you were going to strip it anyway...
One thing to be wary of is keeping the swarf from electrics and loco mechanics. It can cause all sorts of mischief.












