Well I did cure the traction problem - added extra weight.
I made the handrails for the cab doors, the missing one for the sliding door and a pair for the rear platform. Also made a couple of door knobs - the plates being gold coloured wrapping paper and double-sided tape.
I also swapped over the hook & loop coupling for a Aristo one I had swapped elsewhere and filled in the slots on the raear platform (where the vestibule door used to fit). I also varnished over the cab paintwork.
The next thing to command my attention was the road name. I decided to call it the Ox Mountains & Moy Junction R.R. The body is around 340mm long and I needed a strip of name decals that long if I was to cover up all the original Penn lettering (without recourse to rubbing down and repainting).
I decided to print my own on a black background with yellow lettering - the black strip being 340mm x 14mm (lettering 8mm high). Now, as I've only got an A4 printer, I considered doing the lettering and one end, and then a seperate strip of black for the opposite end. However, measuring the diagonal of the paper, I realised I could print it in one - albeit only one 'banner' per sheet of paper.
I used MS Word and the Drawing symbol for a square. The square was elongated to fit the landscape page and filled black. The the lettering was added using WordArt and checked againt the "page" measurement bars by zooming in on 'View'.
Coloured fill was added and the ouline of the lettering was also changed to the fill colour. Once I was happy with alignment and centering, I grouped the shape and the text (hold down the shift key and click on the text and the shape - make sure you move the cursor away from the text but still on the shape). Right click and a shell menu drops down to allow you to click on Grouping. If it is hasn't been grouped before, it will only allow Group.
Once it was grouped, I clicked off and then back on the object and swivelled it to a diagonal position. I then stretched either end into the corners of the page with some further tweaking to allow for maximum length. The I did a test print on plain paper before going to photo paper. I should mention I find it best to use a 'narrow' print if the grouped object is going to be steched - otherwise the lettering might look a little too fat when stretched.
I had thought that using photo paper, and printing 'best', might give good results but the yellow turned out too deep and the black had a bluish tinge. I persevered as I thought the varnish might alter the hue of the black. I varnished both sides of the paper to prevent ingress of moisture (based on a learning curve). However, the varnish didn't alter it so I decided to use plain paper (80gsm - Tesco's finest).
I thought I'd print it photo quality but the colours didn't come out right (I had to set the printer to printing on photo paper to get borderless printing and Epson are very clever at screwing anything up that doesn't come from them like ink and paper).
So, rather than waste the paper, I printed in photo mode on plain paper which resulted in a miniscule corner missing off one end of the 'banners'. Nothing to worry about. The names were cut out, double-sided tape applied and trimmed, then the raw (white) edges were coloured in with large felt tip marker.