paint shops!
The C-16 looks good, and a little less "Colorado". with couplers, it can go into service for now. later it will need improved electrical pick up ( a good idea on all brass, and on all but the best engineered locomotives).
Before the C-16 showed up the next project on my list was my little FED 4-4-0 .
These were imported in the late 70's by Far East Distributors, which was a division of NWSL made to sell inexpensive products, without diluting the excellent NWSL. FED imported HON3 2-6-0s and 4-4-0s
They cost about $38.00 new, about a third of the going rate for brass at that time. They are tender drive, and have no pick up on the locomotive, and this made them horrible runners as the tender rock from the torque of the tender drive would break the electrical conduct making the operation very jerky. Due to this they got horrible reviews, and they just sat on hobby shop shelves
Years later it was figured out that you could add electrical pick up, and a better motor and make an exceptional running if somewhat plain locomotive out of them, and with some extra brass castings they could be made into stunning models. Boone Morrison wrote some articles in the Narrow gauge and shortline Gazette, and they disappeared off of the shelves.
When they came out I was planning on buying one a week until I had lots until I read a review. I wish I hadn't seen the review, cause at that time I was routinely adding pick up to brass locomotives. Now 35 years I have one each of the 2-6-0, and 4-4-0. the 2-6-0 is already painted , reworked with better electrical pick up. and equipped with a Loco-doc remotoring kit. I'm painting the 4-4-0 right now, will add the electrical pick up as it gets put together, and the locodoc remotoring kit will follow as funds for it become available.
I have several steps to painting brass. the first step, which I left out this time, and if it bites me in the *** I will deserve it, is to take the parts of the disassembled (excluding the motor gears and axles & wheels) locomotive. and soak them in paint striper to remove varnish that was sprayed on the locomotive to keep the brass from tarnishing (some brass models were sprayed with brass colored paint, to hide differences in color between various brass parts). after they have been soaked I scrub them with a decommissioned tooth brish to remove any remaining varnish or paint.
Then I boil those same part (still excluding the motor ect) in soapy water to remove any grease, or remains of flux. after bathing in boiling saopy water for ten to fifteen minutes, and then put them in a colander, and rinse them in hot water. (after they have been boiled, rubber glove go on so the brass does not get contaminated by oil from my skin)
from there they go into a pan full of vinegar, placed on the stove and heated for another 15 minutes, then it is back into the colander, another long rinse, and then I put the pieces on paper plates, and put them under my halogen work lights, and leave them under the lights for a half hour or more which will dry all the remaining water, and get the brass warm so the paint will dry fast and bake on .
I spray them with red or grey auto body primer first, let them sit under the lights until the paint set's up. and then turn the pieces over and hit the other side. after both sides are primed, and the primer is set up hard, I spay it with a high quality spray paint can. I used to believe in flat black, but now I do satin black (years of excellent management has made my railroads much more profitable, and thus the amount of maintenance that can be afforded has been increased greatly.
I pulled the locomotive frame and cowcatcher out of the vinegar quick, as I don't have much experience with the vinegar on pot metal so I pulled the pot metal locomotive frame, cylinder saddle, and cowcatcher quicklt from the hot vineger.
Bill nelson
more later.