QUOTE: Originally posted by cheese3 QUOTE: Originally posted by jacon12 QUOTE: Originally posted by rayhippard cheese3, I looked at your web site pictures and your painted backdrop looked very professional. Nice work ! Your new layout is progressing nicely. Hope to see more pics later. Ray ---- Great Northern fan. Thanks Ray, I hope to get back to work on it soon. I think the Honey do list is about caught up for now. Jarrell Lol... no.. I'm confused! Sorry Cheese, I didn't notice Ray was 'speaking' to you, not me. Jarrell I'm confused [:(]
QUOTE: Originally posted by jacon12 QUOTE: Originally posted by rayhippard cheese3, I looked at your web site pictures and your painted backdrop looked very professional. Nice work ! Your new layout is progressing nicely. Hope to see more pics later. Ray ---- Great Northern fan. Thanks Ray, I hope to get back to work on it soon. I think the Honey do list is about caught up for now. Jarrell
QUOTE: Originally posted by rayhippard cheese3, I looked at your web site pictures and your painted backdrop looked very professional. Nice work ! Your new layout is progressing nicely. Hope to see more pics later. Ray ---- Great Northern fan.
Adam Thompson Model Railroading is fun!
QUOTE: Originally posted by dehusman That's not a jack, its a turntable. Its designed to do that. It is common for large pieces of Maintenance equipment to have turntables under them so they could be reversed or rotated 90 deg so they could be rolled off the track at a motorcar set out (railroad ties anchored at gauge that would allow a motor car to be rolled on them and moved away from the tracks). Many motor car set out tracks at gang headquarters had a little shed that housed the motorcar. Dave H.
Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com
QUOTE: Originally posted by ereimer and people wonder why we live longer now . at the least this sort of thing must have been the cause of many lost feet and hands . i'll bet they didn't know enough to come in out of the rain either [:)]
QUOTE: Originally posted by orsonroy Gee, those things seem to be all over. One of the roads that ran in the area I'm modelling, the CP&StL (a forerunner of the C&IM), was a shoestring road. To try and keep their post office mail contract and to cut their expenses, the CP&StL took a model A delivery van, gave it flanged wheels, and added a turntable-like jack-like thing to the bottom of the car, to turn it at the ends of the line. There's a couple of Paul Stringham photos of this contraption in the C&IM history, taken about 1938. Needless to say, the road went bankrupt by 1941, and was mostly melted down into tank parts.
Ray Breyer
Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943