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Re: The Flying Scotsman
Posted: Sun Apr 10, 2016 7:12 pm
by Grandad
Great pictures BK

And how lucky that those three were all at York for your visit. I can't remember the quantities but a couple of weeks ago they published in The Mail how much paint and white spirit was used to get the Scotsman back to her formal livery. Many many gallons....but she is looking beautiful. Thanks again. I am hoping that one day she will find her way down to Kent.
Re: The Flying Scotsman
Posted: Sun Apr 10, 2016 8:41 pm
by Horus
Great stuff BK

I always pay a visit when in the area and as you say its free so even better. You should also have seen another Pacific A4 class loco called 'Sir Nigel Gresley' usually in blue livery and named after the designer of the famouse Mallard Sir Nigel himself who also served his apprenticeship in the same place that I did

Re: The Flying Scotsman
Posted: Sun Apr 10, 2016 11:18 pm
by LovelyLadyLux
Cool photos BK! The trains definitely look more than pristine
@Grandad - what is
white spirit? Undercoat? Polish?
Re: The Flying Scotsman
Posted: Sun Apr 10, 2016 11:51 pm
by Horus
LLL, white spirit is a paint thinners used in enamel gloss

paints, similar to the old 'Turpentine' that decorators used and stunk to high heaven.
Re: The Flying Scotsman
Posted: Mon Apr 11, 2016 1:11 am
by LovelyLadyLux
Okkkk - turpentine - yeah that smelly stuff. Ok got it - paint thinner.
Re: The Flying Scotsman
Posted: Mon Apr 11, 2016 10:58 am
by Kiya
LovelyLadyLux wrote:Okkkk - turpentine - yeah that smelly stuff. Ok got it - paint thinner.
Its also used to clean brushes after work with gloss paint

Re: The Flying Scotsman
Posted: Mon Apr 11, 2016 11:30 am
by Horus
Many years ago my father would use Turpentine when painting, incidentally it is made from a plant (a bush), but it would smell the house out and it was expensive to manufacture. Later a product called 'Turpentine Substitute' came along which was cheaper and did not smell quite so strongly, it was also a manufactured product and not a vegetable derivative. This evolved into the 'White Spirit' we use today as a paint thinners and also as Kiya pointed out to clean brushes after using gloss paints, although nowadays many gloss paints are water soluble so just rinse out with clean water.
Re: The Flying Scotsman
Posted: Tue Apr 12, 2016 9:04 am
by Kiya
I hated washing brushes after steeping in Turps it stank like hell

Re: The Flying Scotsman
Posted: Tue Apr 12, 2016 9:07 am
by Ruby Slippers
Not to be confused with 'surgical spirit' LLL! I think you would know this better as 'alcohol rub'.
