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I have thought for some time about weathering a freight car. After reading all the discussions about dry brush, air brush, hair brush, pastel chalks and other techniques I decided I'd go a different route.

I have a new piece of rolling stock attached to three rail track that I screwed to my deck. This is going to be a all Mother Nature Weathering Experiment.

The criteria for the car:

  • Scale Boxcar
  • Road I would like on my pike - preferable New England based
  • Bright color vs. dull or dark
  • New when put out to start the experiment

I placed it on the 4th of July. It is in a spot where every side save one end gets sun during the day. As one friend stated, it will be interesting to see what 1:1 weather does to a 1:48 rail car. The car is a MTH Vermont Railway Boxcar. 

The plan is to take a picture every week and see what we have next Fourth of July. I should probably put some rustoleum on the track, but I'm not touching the car / trucks or wheels.

Hope you like my little experiment, Paul.

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Last edited by Railrunnin
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John, Joe and Surefire - Thanks for the input.

I believe there is enough dirt / debris that gets blown around in the storms around here that I am going to resist any type of intervention. Maybe next year I will have different rules but this one seems like a good way to start.

My only concern is if a bird drops a turd on it? That is an awful hard one to explain to a paint foreman....

Paul - how big is a bird turd in scale? 

Most VTR cars never really faded. These cars were painted using advancements in freight car primers and paints and always looked good for their short lived lives. Worst case shown was an abused car by late1983 with some rust. For the most part, they remained looking new through their life cycle.

My car is modeled as new for my time frame with slight dirt. I also believe most cars had silver roofs. The MTH PS1 car looks like an incorrect model. I think they might be flat top Berwick's in the real photos? Doors are also different than the MTH and sit much lower with the reinforced sill design.

I don’t believe your experiment will work and would not be prototypical for that road. I would spray it down and scrub it with mineral spirits to remove oily fingerprints. When dry, take a large brush and cover the body with orange powder. Spay with Dullcote and you will have an aged toned down yellow – orange boxcar like the last photo. Sponge the yellow roof with silver and you will have a nice looking slightly aged car. All could be finished in under 1 hour.

 

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Last edited by SIRT

The ultraviolet light will fade the paint and slowly destroy the ABS plastic. Moisture will cause rust to metal wheels. Simple facts. Hardly what I would call an experiment since people who have run their O gauge trains outdoors can attest to the drawbacks inherent to taking their trains outdoors. (And why garden railway manufacturers use UV-resistant plastics for their models.)

And you still won't end up with the kind of weathering you see on the prototype, where dirt collects closer to the running surface and rust eventually builds along the carbody seams. Your plastic won't rust without some modeling help.

I have used chalks and Dullcote on the N scale cars I have weathered. Considering all the options available to you, I'm not sure why you feel the need to try something like this, given the inevitable result. But it's your car. Do what you want.

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