Attach a toy pinwheel on the front of your fastest passenger train!
GG1 Guy: I had a thread 4/23/06 on the subject. There were some interesting replies. Search posts by Traindaddy1 "dust"
I just run the trains really, really fast.
1. Live with it. I use a dusting brush that I bought in a hobby shop. I also use compressed air, regulated low. and I dust with Pledge. I remove items, clean them well and put them back. I just live with it and enjoy them.
John
Maybe an "O" scale tornado is an accessory someone could start manufacturing.
Modeling the "Fargo Area Rapid Transit" in O scale 3 rail.
Canned air is helpful--provided everything is glued down. It's far from perfect--there is always a thin patina that remains--but at least it gets the worst of it.
I can only imagine that same dust on a layout, with its fragile scenery materials, tiny human figures, buildings and miniature automobiles. Putting an air filter in the layout room is probably the safest bet, but I'm not sure I've ever read a really good way of handling the dust problem.
Give your cat catnip and lock it in the room for 2 hours. Let cat out, put a box fan in a window to blow outside. Put all the cars back on the track and your done.
I've seen several good layouts that were very well done, but had dust on everything in sight, which really detracted from the layout. I realize that some things are very delicate & not easily dusted. What's the best way to keep dust off a layout, or remove it if it's already there?
I see no clear reason why I should grow up...
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