Maybe you can give these people a call:
Operation Lifesaver Illinois:
Operation Lifesaver has a wide variety of educational materials for all ages. To order Materials, contact: Elite Promotions 1-800-720-8516, or Morton Suggestion 1-800-323-0423.
I hope this helps,
Kurt
LIONEL produced an Operation Livesaver O Gauge Boxcar.
There is still one at L&J Hobbies here in Portage, MI.
Call all the hobbby shops to get those Boxcars.
Andrew
Watch my videos on-line at https://www.youtube.com/user/AndrewNeilFalconer
TrainManTy wrote:What do you mean?
i'm making an OLS video. i just need some tips. it's about a car or truck trying to beat the train.
Youtube has a few videos of trains vs cars.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gtv14ZM8DNI&mode=related&search
This was staged, but it will draw a few more videos for you.
Would you like the vehicles to collapse upon impact when the train strikes them?
Andrew Falconer wrote: Would you like the vehicles to collapse upon impact when the train strikes them?Andrew
yes that be nice.
Die-Cast Automobiles are out. They are too thick and too strong to be crushed.
To achieve the crushing effect the autos and trucks must be made from very thin materials that are closer to scale dimensions.
Vacuum-formed thin plastic sheets and aluminum pan foil hand shaped into the form of a scale automobile model would be the best way to make crushable automobiles.
If there are any already produced they would be in a Dollar store or someplace similar.
This might be better suited for a RC train that does not have electricity in the rails.
If foil crosses the rails it will short! This is true of all electrified rail model trains.
Vacuum-formed plastic automobile made from thin, brittle sheets of Polystyrene formed into parts would be the best way to recreate a crash with an O Scale Locomotive.
There might be models that are Vacuum-formed. It will take a bit of work to find them.
It might be just as easy to ask some model makers to assemble them.
The Polystyrene sheets could be vacuum-formed around Die-Cast Zinc Models.
Maybe one of these old rubber cars would work !!
Thanks, John
Andrew posted: "Vacuum-formed thin plastic sheets and aluminum pan foil hand shaped into the form of a scale automobile model would be the best way to make crushable automobiles."
I recall seeing the suggestion long ago to make cheap automobiles by forming aluminum foil over more expensive models, then painting. I couldn't find it on the forum; so it might have been in the magazine.
Bob Nelson
kpolak wrote:Youtube has a few videos of trains vs cars.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gtv14ZM8DNI&mode=related&searchThis was staged, but it will draw a few more videos for you.Kurt
As Mythbusters would say; "Well there's your problem!"
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