Finishing off the .30 cal liner rack. Primed, painted and mounted:
Next, the liners. The liners are painted in Service Brown, alias SCC 2, made by mixing approximately equal proportions of Tamiya XF52 and XF63. I got the mix from using an excellent app, iModelKit. It's well worth a look for paint references and a whole host of other useful tools. The stencils were added and the liners were then sealed for weathering with a coat of Citadel Purity Seal varnish:
The Armorpax resin liners have an astonishing level of detail and to bring it out, I applied some thin oil washes. I use Abteilung 502 oils, which last forever. Oils vary in the proportion of oil to pigment, the oil producing a gloss finish. To produce a matt finish, the neat oils can be placed on card for a few hours to soak away some oil. In this case, I mixed the washes directly, using odourless turpentine:
First step is to moisten a flat brush with turpentine, dab it on paper towel until almost dry and then apply to the surfaces to be weathered. This helps the wash spread by capillary action. Then using a very fine brush, the wash is applied. After leaving for a about 15 mins, any unwanted wash can be removed with the flat brush moistened with more turpentine:
Next some before and after comparisons. I wanted the detail to stand out but the weathering to be muted. Even so, this is a bit stark but it will tone down when dust is applied later:
All coming together. The AN/PRC-25 manpack radio was equipped with two antenna, an AT/892/PRC-25 three foot blade antenna and an AT-271A/RC-10 ten foot rod antenna. I'll need to replace the one fitted here to be correct for the Australian use on Centurion:
The fire extinguisher on Paul Scott's 064 here is a later addition:
Hope this is of interest.
Stephen