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I may have to see about obtaining some of those. Though I was also this → ← close to breaking out the epoxy putty today, except I still didn’t manage to overcome my reluctance to use it 
Yes the Canadians used Mark 3s at Dieppe and Mark 1s and 2s and Oke flamethrower i seem to recall.That’s probably the best way to go for a Mk. I or II: buy a resin conversion set and put it on the AFV Club hull. IIRC they saw action at Dieppe too, didn’t they? Or was that only Mk. IIIs?
That sounds like you’re talking about safety fuse, though. Cordtex, as I understand it from the Churchill manual, seems to be what’s usually called detonating cord today — that doesn’t burn slowly but detonates along its entire length at once (well, at something like 8 km/s anyway).Had some fun with that Cortex fuse
Probably right Jakko, its a good few years ago now 50 plus.That sounds like you’re talking about safety fuse, though. Cordtex, as I understand it from the Churchill manual, seems to be what’s usually called detonating cord today — that doesn’t burn slowly but detonates along its entire length at once (well, at something like 8 km/s anyway).
Indeed,I certainly have to agree with the guys here,....Hopefully more than I am enjoying painting the insides of the bridge
After spraying (and re-masking), I mixed up a wash from the same white and SCC 2, but now in about 1:1 proportions, plus water. This got applied over all of the off-white parts of the bridge to shade them, and this was less than fun work where it came to covering all the braces inside the trusses.
Here is the bridge without wash on the left, with on the right:
Once it had dried, I drybrushed all of this with a cream white colour, Rackham Noëssis White (out of production for 15 years or so, but I have a few bottles :smiling3: ) to highlight the detail. Drybrushed on the left, not drybrushed on the right:
And then followed some more drybrushing, now with pure white to highlight the details and edges that will be towards the light once the bridge is on the tank. Here’s a view of the complete bridge:
Now the deck …
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