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New ideas on "Partials"

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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, July 11, 2004 10:46 AM
My co-worker has a partial. He takes it out to eat lunch. It looks like a piece of ham. We tease him all the time we tell him he forgot a piece of ham on his plate.
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, July 8, 2004 10:59 PM
Even more fun loosing them playing hockey!!
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, July 8, 2004 3:06 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by FJ and G

Tony, you're giving away your age.[^]


Dave:

Hey, I'm only 44 & I have 28 teeth in my mouth (had 4 pulled for orthodontia as a kid). My dad had a partial, before he lost the few teeth he had left.

Nothing like having 4 perfectly good teeth removed from your mouth.

Tony
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Posted by spankybird on Thursday, July 8, 2004 1:24 PM
Just to remind everyone, here is the circus tents that Dave is talking about.


Here is mine

This tent is still under construction.

This is one of my friends, Bobo3’s



tom

I am a person with a very active inner child. This is why my wife loves me so. Willoughby, Ohio - the home of the CP & E RR. OTTS Founder www.spankybird.shutterfly.com 

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Posted by Roger Bielen on Thursday, July 8, 2004 12:45 PM
Dave,
In a way I've used your #3 along the edge of my layout. I have a spur servicing a warehouse that is a loading dock with a building wall approx. 1/2" thick. Behind it there is an aisle leading to my control panel. The back face of the control panel toward the layout is about 4" above layout grade, I sprayed it with the texured paint, added a pair of overhead doors and have another warehouse next to my station.

Our hobby makes use of many illusion techniques, we only have to use our imagination.
Roger B.
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Posted by FJ and G on Thursday, July 8, 2004 12:34 PM
Tony, you're giving away your age.[^]
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, July 8, 2004 11:32 AM
For a minute there, David, I thought you were talking about dentures! [:D] [;)]

Tony
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New ideas on "Partials"
Posted by FJ and G on Thursday, July 8, 2004 7:49 AM
As far as I can determine, no one has ever mentioned or written about the 3 types of partials. One of them is commonly used. One is rare and the third is very rare.

1. The most common partial, found on toy train and hi-rail layouts alike, is when a road, tracks, river, mountain, forest, etc etc ends abruptly at the train table edge. Your mind naturally fills in the missing pieces just like when you are reading a good novel. You imagine things happening that are not there, such as the mountain chain continuing for several hundred more miles, the river running to the sea eventually, and the road or track leading off somewhere distant.

2. This partial is a bit rare but nevertheless is used on occasion. It consists of splitting a building at the table edge so you can see inside the building. Spankybird did this with a circus tent. The same could be done by splitting a train in two, such as a passenger train and the locomotive, but this train splitting idea has never been done before, probably because the thought of slicing a train in half lengthwise is too grotesque to ponder.

3. This last partial is EXTREMELY rare. It consists of adding a complete structure such as a building or oil storage tank near the edge of the layout with the deception being that it continues just off the table. This is esp. useful for extremely large structures that simply won't fit on your layout. Some examples might be a weighing station on a spur leading to a coal unloading operation. You don't have room for the entire coal structures, coal piles and stuff like that, except for perhaps a small pile of coal. But, this gives you an excuse to run a coal drag. An example for a grain elevator or steel mill could also be devised, where the hint of bigger things could be made by putting some structures or stuff near the edge of the layout that you would recognize. Stuff you might recognize for example would be steam locomotive spare parts at the edge of a turntable, with partial tracks leading to a roundhouse, but the roundhouse is not there and is believed to be just off the layout.

I don't know if I'm making these examples clear or not.

Anyway, the use of partials can greatly "expand" your layout's horizons; something esp. needed in O scale where space is premium.

Dave Vergun

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