Hey Bill,
Thank you very much for the compliments and I am glad you liked my build..!! Much appreciated my friend.
As for the tires, lets see... I did the weathering process in three stages. I first had a mixture of Polyscale French Earth Brown, Dust and flat base coat and did a 50-50 mixture with distilled water.
I concentrated on the surface that hits the road the most along with the treads. I did about 6 coats and in between each coat, I took a soft rag and lightly wiped of the tops of the tread to reveal the colour of the tire itself.
I worked the mixture to the sides of the wheels paying more attention to the outskirts of the tires and lightly working my way to the center.
From there I took my pinky and rubbed in the center of the tire to again bring more of the tire colour out.
The last part I took Tamiya's weathering master's set "A".. I started off with Sand and then light sand., I began to work on the details of the hub and side treads..
The overall vehicle was weathered using this mixture as well as the Tamiya Master's set "A" aka Tamiya makeup.. lol
Haha after looking at the LAV, I really do like how the tires bring out the over all build.. This was basically on a whim, I really had no technique, just did as I saw fit.. Sound right?
Again, thank you..!!
Nate,
Thank you for taking a look see and I am glad you liked the weathering job on my 150..
Flaps up,
Mike
Rangers Lead The Way
If you would listen to everybody about the inaccuracies, most of the kits on your shelf would not have been built Too Close For Guns, Switching To Finger