58a gold grill code1,flat black
Re: 58a gold grill code1,flat black
Heavy rusting on the axles suggests to me that the original silver has been discoloured by decades of storage in damp conditions
Re: 58a gold grill code1,flat black
I too agree,SMS88 wrote:Heavy rusting on the axles suggests to me that the original silver has been discoloured by decades of storage in damp conditions
numi
- Attachments
-
- $_57.JPG (149.72 KiB) Viewed 1939 times
numi
One cannot do much with all the monies in this world but can do much more if he strives toward contentment.
One cannot do much with all the monies in this world but can do much more if he strives toward contentment.
Re: 58a gold grill code1,flat black
I believe the early silvers had no rust inhibitors as modern silvers do and did contain ultra fine metals which tends to catch "rust" (browning) if exposed to any harsh environment.The lacquers/varnish used back then were also contributors of this browning.Am i right??fixer wrote:why would it cause silver trim to go a gold shade ??
numi
numi
One cannot do much with all the monies in this world but can do much more if he strives toward contentment.
One cannot do much with all the monies in this world but can do much more if he strives toward contentment.
Re: 58a gold grill code1,flat black
I was revisiting this thread because anomalous gold trim is one of my interest areas.
Having looked at the photographs again, what I see is a very even colour on the 58a, whilst the 33a merely exhibits a very coarse mottling. I therefore think there is every chance that the gold trim on the 58a is precisely that - gold trim. (Remember that there was a short run of 57a Wolseleys with gold trim too.)
Having looked at the photographs again, what I see is a very even colour on the 58a, whilst the 33a merely exhibits a very coarse mottling. I therefore think there is every chance that the gold trim on the 58a is precisely that - gold trim. (Remember that there was a short run of 57a Wolseleys with gold trim too.)
Re: 58a gold grill code1,flat black
It may be useful to have a silver and gold trimmed model in the photo with this one so we can compare the colour a little better. The trim looks quite pale although I do have a couple of models somewhere that appear to be that mix of silver/gold that I think we've discussed before.
John
There's nothing regular about wheels
There's nothing regular about wheels
Re: 58a gold grill code1,flat black
I'd put that down to flash.johnboy wrote:The trim looks quite pale...
Re: 58a gold grill code1,flat black
The B of BEA is a fine dark blue which suggests to me that finger grease or some chemical has rubbed on the front and discoloured standard silver trim
Re: 58a gold grill code1,flat black
1) I think the blue B of the BEA badge on the front of the model is simply the result of the blue body paint showing through, either as a result of high-edge wear (e.g. in the box) or because the original application used rather thin paint which did not coat very well.SMS88 wrote:The B of BEA is a fine dark blue which suggests to me that finger grease or some chemical has rubbed on the front and discoloured standard silver trim
2) Please provide evidence for finger grease/"some chemical" turning silver paint gold. Please also provide either an explanation of why we do not see this transformation on other (playworn) models, or photographic evidence of models where the silver trim has discoloured to gold as the result of exposure to finger grease/"some chemical".