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I glued the underbody to the plastic body with Zap
CA and added the brake wheel to the end of the car body. The basic car was ready for the paint shop. I gave it a coat of
Modelflex #16-05 Weathered Black and then some Gloss #16-603 in the locations where I would be decaling.
The car had the standard GB&W lettering used in the 1950s and 1960s, so I was able to use a Scale Rail Graphics GBW/KGB 40' wood boxcar decal set to letter the car. These decals are very thin and I had troubles with the large
KEWAUNEE GREEN BAY AND WESTERN decal; it took several attempts to get one of those decals down without tearing. By the end of the second side of the car I developed the technique of putting the dry decals down on the car side and then using a wet
Q-Tip to release the backing paper. (Andy gave me some decal tips after that so I hope things go better with future projects.)
The car number was cut from the boxcar number set, using the middle digits of an "8100" from the set and then adding a "7" to the left and an appropriate finishing number, remembering that the KGB cars were odd numbers only.
Andy and I used two photos to determine the positioning of the lettering. Interestingly enough, the cars were lettered differently! KGB 7177 had the
CAPY data below the road number in the second panel, while 7195 had that data on the third panel. Andy and I both chose to model our cars after the 7195 style, as that was the later photo and matched the other open-topped cars better.
I used the largest dimensional data in the Scale Rail Graphics set for the car; again, this was a "close enough" decision. A
Microscale or similar set could be used to get more exact data but considering the accuracy of the basic car body and the scale I had no problem with using the SRG data.
My favorite use of the SRG set was to cut out letters from some end reporting marks to add a
GB AAR code to each side of the car. The
CALDWELL SNUBBER lettering from the decal set was used as a filler in the far right panel of each side and a
NOR 9-54 shop date completed the "close enough" lettering. Two applications of
Microscale Micro-Sol set the decals in place.
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