I would hardly call myself a good modeller, but the Railroad Flying Scotsman represents an excellent starting point for young modellers to try out their skills on. I used it to create no.97 Humorist as a prototype for the fleet of A10s and A3s I have been making.Nova wrote:I feel like you have largely missed the point of the question.
I'm only 20, very soon to be 21, with nowhere near the skill level other users on this forum have, for that matter my total number of usable LNER locos comes to 1, and that's just an N2. The most I feel confident with my current skill level in doing is fitting a double chimney (if the single is removable) and smoke deflectors. I don't feel confident that I can totally disassemble the bodyshell from a model that currently sells brand new for £160 with the promise that it will look better than when it was fresh out the box.
What I need is a hornby A3 that, mould/assembly issues aside, represents an A3 in it's final condition. I'm not fussed over whether the running board is totally straight or if the boiler is a perfect fit.
the point is will people look at the finished post-war LNER green livery model regardless of defects and go "that's a BR A3 in apple green"?
furthermore, can the models I linked above be modified with the above stated fitting of double chimney and smoke deflectors, to represent an A3 in its final form?
that was what I originally asked. not whether the bodyshell is perfectly moulded.
Humorist
ECML Pacifics
An alternative, should you wish it. The odds and sods which I bought to create these models added up to around £30 across the eight Pacifics. I have finished four of them now - three wartime black, and Humorist in apple green. The last four are in the final stages before painting, more or less.