Today we'll be going over easy mud and dust effect techniques, as they apply to all the different parts of the T-14. Support the channel! / thescaleengineer
Pretty cool result, clean enough for it to be considered newly deployed, but weathered enough to understand that it's in use already. I'll try to use this as reference when redoing some of the mud on my 2A4 model. Thanks for the guide
For a tank with markings for Ukraine, it is pretty clean. As a former Bradley gunner in Europe, our vehicles got pretty dirty. And muddy. One thing people tend to forget about dished wheels is that mud and gravity forces mud to the rims. There is a nice book on Russian and Ukrainian army during the war and boy are they dirty and muddy. I think you definitley more weathering.
@@KC-GOD-IS. you do realize that rust is a water soluble oxide and can stain other things besides just the metal they’re formed on right? If not that would be pretty embarrassing for you
Pretty cool result, clean enough for it to be considered newly deployed, but weathered enough to understand that it's in use already. I'll try to use this as reference when redoing some of the mud on my 2A4 model. Thanks for the guide
Thank you! Glad you found it helpful!
Thank you sharing.
The mud looks tasty
Thank ya kindly sir!
Great how-to video and narration. Thanks
@@rrl4245 thank you!
That is an awesome weathered tank - I learned quite a bit from that video I can't wait to try.
@@justted6178 glad to hear you enjoyed it! Thank you
For a tank with markings for Ukraine, it is pretty clean. As a former Bradley gunner in Europe, our vehicles got pretty dirty. And muddy. One thing people tend to forget about dished wheels is that mud and gravity forces mud to the rims. There is a nice book on Russian and Ukrainian army during the war and boy are they dirty and muddy. I think you definitley more weathering.
@@willthorson4543 dang more weathering?? Haha I thought I did a lot to be honest, but I’m not super surprised that it still looks light.
Liked & subscribed....
You call yourself the "scale engineer" and yet put the representation of "rust" on the representation of rubber track pads, not very "engineerish."
@@KC-GOD-IS. you do realize that rust is a water soluble oxide and can stain other things besides just the metal they’re formed on right? If not that would be pretty embarrassing for you