no experiment is really a failure; rather it's a learning experience. Here's what I did with the structure that failed; I modeled an abandoned, falling apart industry with it
I mussed up one of my tipple castings a while back and used it as a planter (the bottom was too thin in the squish moold and had holes; perfect for a planter)
Tom Trigg
David,
As far as mistakes go I've documented the one I've had with my railway so far on my web site. One thing I do to minimize those mistakes if I'm thinking of doing something that is outside my normal areas of work is to do alot of reasearch on the subject. Someone somewhere has probably tried it. If that reseach shows that it's something I feel comfortable doing I'll do it. If I don't feel comfortable I'll either have someone else do it or have someone teach me how to do the project.
Jack
I think its fine to try and reinvent the wheel as long as your not an architect or brain surgeon. Richard's article was in the June 2000 GR. He used anchoring cement and not the vinyl patcher I mentioned above.
-Brian
The Home of Articulated Ugliness
Maybe a bit more reading first! There was an excellent article in GR a few years ago (maybe 4?) by Richard Weatherby on building structures with cast walls. He used Precision Products panels for the molds and vinyl concrete patcher reinforced with hardware cloth, if I remember correctly.
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