Just wondering why you want to waste your time (and money) putting markings on when you know you'll be sanding them off to re-paint? For myself, I held off on the markings until the end.
Good question. Difficult answer... For years, (12 to be exact) since I've been in Laramie County, the local community has annually been the fortunate recipient of World War II re-enactments and displays. They have been outstanding productions and if anyone is in Cheyenne for Frontier Days, keep your eyes open for Fort D.A. Russel days over at F.E. Warren AFB. I, personally have seen nothing done for the Korean or Vietnam Vets. Same goes for the Cold War. The current conflicts Vets are getting plenty of positive support so I believe everyone is paying tribute to them daily. Call me freeking weird, I'm getting used to it. It's time for folks to say thank you to the forgotten and ignored generations. With my very limited resources, I going to try and pay tribute to these people. I have plenty of paint, just not the correct color for Korea and Vietnam trucks. I can't go down to wally world and pick up a case of semi gloss OD green in the correct color. It comes down to this: do the best I can with what I have and hope I can do right by them. I have a can of white paint. If it's supposed to be yellow, I can work that into the budget. Expensive parts..for that matter, any parts will have to wait till I get some kind of income that allows for the extras. If I can get the trucks to an event and they will be received and appreciated by those to which they're a tribute to, I'll get them there. Letters can be sanded and replaced really easy. I have the metal lettering kit so no big deal.
The Korean War will have the M-211 someday as their tribute. One of my M-35 trucks is already finished in desert tan (sand) and dedicated to my Marine unit, HMH 769, Mag 42, NAS Alameda. The last M-35 will be a tribute to those I served with in the Air Force who gave their lives in service to this country. The M-1009 is going to be the easiest..it's my Cold War truck. Having served through the last 10 years of the Cold War, it's the easiest of all.
Everything that I can do has to be done with stuff on hand. Either that or traded for. For example, the inner hub seals are the rubber type, are completely rotted and cost too much for me to buy. I do have 4 of the rubber ones (new, only one opened to verify I can't make them fit without removing a lot of heavy metal). I'd trade all 4 of them to someone for a set of the new zipper ones. Without those being replaced, driving is not worth the risk of damaging the joint. If someone wants to make the trade, please PM me. USPS shipping's still pretty cheap.
So, simple answer, easy to paint letters and numbers on, easy to sand the paint off. Tough questions are: Will our Vietnam Vets take this truck in the condition it's in and the intent for which it's meant as a positive tribute to their service? Or, am I wasting my time and effort to a project that will be an insult to their/your service? PM your comments to me is fine. I value your inputs. If it's negative, I'll put the project on the back burner and work with what I have on the others. When funds become available, I'll restart the project.
And by the way, I talk too much.
Semper Fi.
Jeff