Very nice looking!!
Please tell us what you used and how you did it.
Les you are right. I grew up in a steel fab shop and been doing it thirty something years now.
Lighter steel would be much easier. But he wanted this one as close to scale as possible and as real as possible,,,, challenging yet very fun. Thanks for the compliments. Keenan
Metalman:
I suspect your trade is working metal? Beautiful job. Reminds me of those Victorian arches one sees in old English RR pixes. (That's supposed to be a compliment!)
I have been toying with the notion of metal (sheet metal, galvanized) for some bridges--or even plain steel and let it rust. Prob'ly in the 20ga category. I'm more a machinist than a sheet metal guy, don't even know if they sell 20ga. I'd solder it together.
Les Whitaker
Nice work, Metalman!!
(And please don't take this as ANYTHING but a compliment: it takes me back 60 years to when I was a kid in Charleston, to see/hear someone refer to that as a "trussel"!!)
Good work!
/Bill
Remember: In South Carolina, North is southeast of Due West... HIOAg /Bill
I don't know what a trussle is but i couldnt do work as good as that if my life depended on it, well done.
Rgds Ian
DW, Thank you , the trussle was made from scratch (all steel) and the lay and design were my own. The structure is patterned off of a concrete structure apperence yet I designed it out of steel. I didn't do any buildalong pics unfortunaltely. But for a breif discription here is what I did.
First I took a picture of the wall scene them skected the design over the pic to get the porportions correct. Then I made a posterboard mock up (Template) of the general plate.
From that I did the layout on a plate and cut it out with a plasma arc. The flanges are all hand rolled flat bar and the rivoted connections are all real, made by drilling 3/32 holes and using #4 finish nails as brads.
I built both halfs then made the cross braceing tying the halfs together. This is a very breif discription and this project had over 100 hrs into it. I'm working on the tunnel scenes now. This has been quite fun and has really sparked my intrest in trains. His train is a 1929 0 scale and very detailed. Researching hundreds of pictures of trussle has opened my eyes up to the increddible beauty of bridges and trussles. Keenan
The head is gray, hands don't work , back is weak, legs give out, eyes are gone, money go's and my wife still love's Me.
Here are a few more pics. Keenan
http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c326/bornagainprimitve/IMG_0041.jpg
http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c326/bornagainprimitve/IMG_0045.jpg
http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c326/bornagainprimitve/IMG_0019-1.jpg
http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c326/bornagainprimitve/IMG_0023.jpg
Here is a train trestle that I just made for a friend. The trestle is very near to scale and the train track comes through the wall then across the fireplace mantle. Enjoy Keenan
http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c326/bornagainprimitve/IMG_0046.jpg
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