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O Scale/Gauge Building Flats

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O Scale/Gauge Building Flats
Posted by Anonymous on Monday, April 24, 2006 10:17 PM
Have any of you had any luck finding building flats in our scale?

I've searched hobby stores and Googled the web high and low, but have yet to find anything in O scale/Ogauge building flats. Nor does there seem to be much in the way of suitable city backdrops, even at backdropwarehouse.com or scenicexpress.com.

What there is seems to be in HO, but I don't have that much room fon my layout or the forced perspective of that much smaller buildings.

BTW, my particular interest is urban building flats, particularly for multi-story city buildings. Downtown Chicago in particular would be perfect, but I'll obviously have to take what I can get.

Finally, do any of you have any guidance for me on enlarging color photos (from web sources) into your own backdrops?

Any guidance would be MUCH appreciated. Thanks.

Bob
Houston, TX
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, April 24, 2006 11:22 PM
There are sources of O Gauge Model Railroad Flats.

One of them competes with Kalmbach, so you will have to guess who they are.

Walthers has almost flat background buildings.

Korber Models has new building modules in O Scale and O Gauge that could serve as building flats.

You have to search for manufacturers of Building Kits, then see what can be used for parts.

Andrew F.
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Posted by Frank53 on Tuesday, April 25, 2006 3:55 AM
O-SCale flats that I have seen are more "fronts", that are 1" to 3" deep and are expensive - I found some at:

www.valleymodeltrains.com

I am using very narrow fronts on the entire top layer of teh layout I am building. In teh corners, I am building these at an angle and simulating streets coming out of teh corners to the tracks.

I bought some HO flats and figured an enlargement proportion to scale them up to O. I scanned them and then printed them on large paper - 17x22. 200% is a bit too big - I went with 180%

Here is one:



I mounted this to a piece of black foam core and then cut it out and installed a few gooseneck lamps on it.

Likewise the one on the right in this photo.



I cut the three building apart and then copied additional brick patterns to stagger these in their depth by pasting the additional brick down the side.







This one is made from sections sections of an engine house I bought from Downtown Deco for $42.00.



These is made from several Ameritowne kit fronts:





THis last one is made from a piece of bainbridge (illustratiion) bord scored to fold. THere is a lot of work yet to do on it:






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Posted by mitchelr on Tuesday, April 25, 2006 4:39 AM
I believe the Ameri-towne building fronts only sell for about $12.95 per section. They are pretty detailed and there are quite a few to select from.

Mitch[swg]

Bob Mitchell Gettysburg, PA TCA # 98-47956 LCCA# RM22839

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Posted by Frank53 on Tuesday, April 25, 2006 5:06 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by mitchelr

I believe the Ameri-towne building fronts only sell for about $12.95 per section. They are pretty detailed and there are quite a few to select from.

Mitch[swg]


True, but they add up quick. I used one $34.95 Ameritowne kit plus 18 fronts on that factory. Some were $12.95, some were $14.95, I've got close to $300.00 in materials in that factory, let alone the wood bracing, paint, lighting and other details. This will probably be close to $500.00 in materials by the time it's finished and at least 100 hours work.

Here's a step by step of the whole project:

http://www.modeltrainjournal.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=2969&start=0
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Posted by Jumijo on Tuesday, April 25, 2006 5:29 AM
My local hobby store has a set of the rural paper flats that I might pick up. They are only a couple of bucks, and would make my backgrounds look a little better. Sure beats painting the buildings in. Like Frank, I'd mount them on board to give them some dimensionality. The set I am referring to had a gas station, a mill, a coal station, etc. I intend to keep them HO size to give the illusion of distance.

Jim

Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale

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Posted by Frank53 on Tuesday, April 25, 2006 5:43 AM
Jim:

Did you paint those mountains in the background, or is that a backdrop mural? - they look great!
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Posted by Jumijo on Tuesday, April 25, 2006 5:54 AM

I painted them, Frank. See the thread regarding backdrops. I just posted a reply on how I did it.

Jim

Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale

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Posted by Frank53 on Tuesday, April 25, 2006 5:58 AM
you're a braver man than me Jim, they look terrific
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Posted by Jumijo on Tuesday, April 25, 2006 6:04 AM
No, no, Frank. There is nothing to fear. It's just paint. Wiring a layout is hard. Working on locos is hard. Make a mistake doing either and you could screw up your trains. Making a mistake on a backdrop is not harmful at all. You paint over it and move on.

Jim

Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale

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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, April 25, 2006 6:10 AM
In my opinion, Ameritowne flats are great. Good selection, great detail, no cleaning-up of "flash", resonably priced (often found at train shows for $10.), or well-stocked stores.

www.ogaugerr.com

Click: web store-buildings-fronts.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, April 28, 2006 4:41 PM
Has anybody seen the Korber Models Building Fronts and Building Flats?

Korber Models structures will make fair approximations of older Chicago buildings.

Andrew F.
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Posted by poppyl on Friday, April 28, 2006 8:30 PM
Other sources for flats/fronts include downtowndeco.com; dpmkits.com;choochenterprises.com; westportmodels.com; and dslshops.com.

Poppyl
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Posted by cmrj on Friday, April 28, 2006 9:37 PM
Bob, ModelRailroader ran an article several month's ago on how to take your own photo's and to convert them in to one large back drop the finished flat was very realistc. I will look to see what issue it was.
Mike
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, April 28, 2006 10:26 PM
My sincere thanks to all who provided the helpful info.

Mike -- I'd appreciate the MR article reference when you find it. Thanks.

Bob

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