Upminster Bay Platform
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(In Topic #13582)

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Grease on sleepers
Hi All. Back in British Rail days, when I used to change cabs on my duty Underground train, I would notice , when there wasn’t a train in the bay, that the track was badly stained. Was this oil or grease from the DMU that ran on that line? As I haven’t found anything about that under the subject of Weathering, or would that just date the period modelled to the Diesel era, making it too modern? Best wishes Kevin
Staying on the thread Kevin.
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Peco recently created a Diesel track weathering kit if you want an all in one option.
https://www.modelrailwaysdirect.co.uk/landscaping-materials/peco-ps-371-track-bed-weathering-kit/
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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Brian
OO gauge DCC ECOS Itrain 4 computer control system
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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Just get a tube of both matt and gloss/satin black acrylic paint from a reject shop/poundland/whatever and dilute them to a wash as you state. From either of the selections, add a little to some white paint toget a greyish wash and paint/wash away on your track until you get the desired effect with the three colour washes.
Steam locomotives also dropped ashes, grease and oil over supply to bearings on rods and wheels to the ground/track which built up over the years on both in and out sides of the tracks. If you can visit a tourist railway near you (and the UK has plenty of those) particularly one where the track was intact rather than relaid by enthusiasts and get a few pix of the servicing areas, as a guide for yourself.
The tube trains you are referring to would have a fair bit of grease from the wheel bearings, electric motor bearings, gear mesh etc as well as the residue from brake shoes, particularly if they were of the Ferodo variety.
The residue in the stabling tracks would reflect the effect of airborne dust etc mixing with whatever particulates coming off those mechanics and settling in those tracks when the train has stopped for any length of time. The movement of the train itself would create a pressure area slightly higher than atmospheric and keeping the particulate mixture of dirt and oil airborne until the train stopped.
One thing I would suggest to do is to hint more at the presence of oil, grease, dust and dirt rather than a full on scale model… no point in making your layout look depressingly gungy!!
Cheers
Trevor
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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