Finally got around to sorting the roof fixings, follows exactly as described above. Having completed that I thought it'd be a therapeutic end to the week to get the crayons out.
Primer was Acid 8 etch which, for some unfathomable reason, surprised me when it came out of the can as grey, I was expecting black but for no other reason than I did. Still grey works for me, so all the parts were duly primed and then top coated.
The roof and floor, both detachable were then sprayed Halfords Satin black, nice colour and lays well, the Halford nozzles do really give a nice spray for a rattle can. The cab sides and front were then sprayed with Land Rover Bronze Green from a rattle can purchased from Autopaint Solutions, Doncaster, it's a cellulose paint and again lays really well with a good nozzle on the can.
Then the problems came, the cab floor slots into the sides with tabs, un-painted they are a snug fit, painted, they don't fit, bleedin obvious really but something I totally failed to take into consideration, luckily they are all hidden tabs so the paint was scraped off and the parts joined.
The reason for keeping the floor separate was for painting, it's black all over and the cab interior is engine colour, the future choice is to just mask the tabs, of make the slots bigger. The problem then is for those who wish to fix the floor in place and paint it all as one as the slots will be sloppy.
Still it is what it is and once all fitted together does look rather nice.
Next just for giggles I pushed the A1 tender up to the engine to check the fall plate and basic heights.
Bother, wasn't expecting that
No issues with the mechanical aspects, all spot on, the tender is weighted a bit too heavy so sits a bit too low, however it was the colour, totally different.
Both colours individually look right, but together they are miles apart, which is strange as they both came from the same can!
The tender under coat was black, the engine was grey, which is at odds with the shades as the paler green has the darker undercoat, the tender has not been in the sun, but on a shelf tucked up away to keep dust to a minimum.
Given that the photo is inside and the lighting is giving it a warm bias the one on the engine looks a better shade.
Having said all that, and whilst writing this I dimly recall the original search for the correct colour and using cans as test subjects, Cider I seem to recall and the infamous Halfords shop mixed exploding cans. The tests involved Pheonix paints and Halfords Land Rover Bronze Green and another I think, I thought it was AS,Doncaster, the winner going onto the A1 tender, but I'm begining to doubt it was AS paint on the A1 tender now.
Time to go back through that saga and try to work out which paint the tender actually got painted in.
Moral of this tale, paint everything at once... from the same source, not two years apart!
MD