A lot of great photos this weekend!
This is my first attempt at applying decals. I made them with a decal kit from Testors and an inkjet printer.
#71 switching the local feed mill in Cuba, Missouri.
Tom
Amazing stuff! These weekend "show & tell" sessions are fab! Very inspiring!(And as a high school teacher, its great to see people teaching each other, with passion for the subject & the sharing! All education should be like this!) (Well, face to face would be preferable, but shoganai what can you do?)
While a novice, I was encouraged by some positive comments about me n-scale a-frame bridge last week, and so got inspired to share some picts of my 1'x4' module that might become part of my "Sourdough & Sequim RailRoad" dreamlayout.
Track is 95% laid (last bit waiting for a bridge, which is waiting for a creekbed, which is waiting for godot...), as is the wiring. All the toggles and powerpack is stuffed into a very slim drawer under the baseboard. I had to set up an anchor for the wires and a spring on each side to pull the wires back into the body as the drawer slides back. I think it works.
Today screwed the fascia in place and sealed the inside edge with latex caulk so the 3 undertrack switch machines along the mainline don't get a bath while landscaping. The rest of the turnouts have caboose handthrows which I tried to slide under the turnouts to reduce their profiles (the first couple installed normally look like catapults).
All the bridges are just sitting there temporary. Will cut off ties & mount to bridges once riverbed in & bridges set.Off to landscaping! Riverbottoms! Rocks! Magic Water! Tunnels! Trees! Wheeeeee!
M.C. Fujiwara
My YouTube Channel (How-to's, Layout progress videos)
Silicon Valley Free-moN
Hi: Nice job on that switcher,Tom.
Mark, looks like you're well on your way for a terrific looking water scene on your module. Please keep us posted on your progress.
Segement 4 from Diamond Valley:
Wolfgang
Pueblo & Salt Lake RR
Come to us http://www.westportterminal.de my videos my blog
Well it's 4:30 am here and I can't sleep. Our baby has an ear infection and has kept me up wanting to be held. I figured I don't know how the day is going to go so I'm going to post my photos now on the things that I have been working on this week.
What you don't see is that I have about 5 engines in the paint booth right now that I have been working on. I'm going to wait until I am all done to post photos of them.
At the same time I am working on learning how to wearther with my airbrush. I picked up the now Kalmbach book from Pelle Soeborg "Done in a Day" and boy is it great.
This first one is three engines that I have been working on. One to the left is a P2K SD45 that I have custom painted to match the messy MRL #8905. The other two engines are Athearn BB. They are the ones that I have been weathering.
This is a more close up shot of my BN unit. It still needs some more details like windshield wipers and added details around the tank
And last is just a photo that proves that I need a better camera for shooting my trains. This is my MRL local exiting the Bozeman Tunnel on my Diorama. Scene still not done.
IT GREAT TO SEE A LOT OF POST THIS WEEK FOR WPF. WE NEED TO HAVE THIS MANY ALL THE TIME!
--Zak Gardner
My Layout Blog: http://mrl369dude.blogspot.com
http://zgardner18.rrpicturearchives.net
VIEW SLIDE SHOW: CLICK ON PHOTO BELOW
wolfgang
I was wondering if all your switches in this picture are left hand or are they on the curve? like the one on the other end of the building.Also was wondering if the cattle shoot is built along side of a buttment? looks gr8 from what I see thank you
slow train Ed
A load of plywood ready for delivery at Dahle Lumber in Haugen,Wisc.
Terry
Terry in NW Wisconsin
Queenbogey715 is my Youtube channel
slow train Edwolfgang I was wondering if all your switches in this picture are left hand or are they on the curve? like the one on the other end of the building.Also was wondering if the cattle shoot is built along side of a buttment? looks gr8 from what I see thank you slow train Ed
Here's the whole story, with track plan. Diamond Valley is a 90° module.
Thanks Chris and all for the compliments on my previous photograph of the CSX locomotive. I have one more submission for this week. This shot was taken on my friends layout during an ops session. The scene is of the Miami, FL passenger station. His model railroad depects the FEC Miami to Key West Extension. Hope all you steam fans enjoy the shot.
The image was enhanced in Photoshop with adding some smoke from the locomotive and converted to Black and White to give it that "old time photograph" look. I am still learning how to use all the features of the Photoshop program and appreciate all comments.
saronaterry A load of plywood ready for delivery at Dahle Lumber in Haugen,Wisc. I like your lumber facility. Is it a kit? Scratchbuilt? Kitbashed? Terry
I like your lumber facility. Is it a kit? Scratchbuilt? Kitbashed?
Some really inspiring work here this weekend. Always my favourite thread. It's been a long time snce I contributed anything.
Finally took some new snaps today. Same old same old. A couple of notes - the sky in the RDC pic is photoshopped. The area behind the bridges in the freight pic showed the door to the layout room, and was really distracting. So I just painted it a neutral tone in p'shop to be easier on the eye.
Cheers.
Thanks,Tom. They're a couple of old Atlas kits I tried to rework a little.I think loading up the bins with lumber helps hide that "kit everybody has " look.
Here's the other end:
WPF on page 3? I'll just bump it up with my poor mans derail.
Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running BearSpace Mouse for president!15 year veteran fire fighterCollector of Apple //e'sRunning Bear EnterprisesHistory Channel Club life member.beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam
Good thing Crandell extended the deadline this week or I wouldn't have made it.
Here is where I left off last weekend on my big corner hill project:
And this is where I'm at now. Except for some touching up, it's fairly complete. I intend to string wires on the poles eventually but that is a project for another day (year?):
A view of the east portals:
And another of the west portals:
Next week's project, fill this 3' x 3' gap with scenery:
John, it was worth the wait! Very nice. You planted tons of trees! Did you make any of them?
For those looking on, Erik and the others discussed extending WPF to go up to midnight on Tuesdays from now on so that latecomers could get their images posted in a given timeframe. We agreed to extend it by a full day...Tom had been cutting it off on Mondays at midnight, but we settled on another full day to accomodate some vocal and disappointed participants.
-Crandell
selector John, it was worth the wait! Very nice. You planted tons of trees! Did you make any of them? -Crandell
Oh boy that was a lot of trees and yes I did make them. Most of the trees are polyfiber balls coated with either WS light green or burnt grass coarse foam. I find that in my lighting, the medium and dark green look a little artificial to my eye. I did another corner mixing those colors in as well and didn't like the result so I will probably be redoing them. I tried to make the trees gradually larger as I worked down the hill to add some forced perspective. I think it worked well without being too obvious. The frontline trees are WS armatures with lichen canopies and covered with the same two colors of foam. I've found that on a slope, you really only need one or two rows of these to hide the fact the polyfiber trees have no trunks. I mixed in a few Super Trees for effect but had to be careful where I placed them since they are so brittle. Those are my favorite trees but I don't put them anywhere that I might have to reach into the layout. I tried to place them among the WS trees to give them some protection.
Well this first one I just threw on here cause, well, look at it! I mean don't you just hate it when you forget to do something pretty important?
The ironic thing is around here there are a number of bigger companies that own multiple buildings that are located pretty close to each other, so empy rigs just pull out, drive down the road a few blocks to another building and load up there so they don't bother closing the doors. Although usually they will still have the doors pinned back with bungi cords. Now the problem is, the rig turned LEFT at the stop lights you see just up ahead. The reason this is a problem, and why I made a significance on the LEFT back there, is because left is heading West, and on West Lombardi there is no industrial, just residential on the north side of Lombardi and mixed residential/commercial on the south side of Lombardi. Going on West Lombardi takes you to HWY 41, which is the most likely that way this driver is going. Now you see why it got me a little worried? And of course just before I snapped the pick the open door was swung out and partially ubstructing the right hand lane.
These are just a bunch of pics I took, they're not of a model RR but I thought they would be neat to show off.
Hrmm. Sorry I did the link wrong. Here it is: http://s588.photobucket.com/albums/ss321/MILW-railfan/train%20photogs/
There is another possible explaination.
Sometimes when the truck is stopped at a diner, truckstop, or even a traffic light, some less than honorable person will open the door to see if it contains anything easily removed. The driver cannot see the doors from his seat.
Dave
Lackawanna Route of the Phoebe Snow
I know he can't see the doors. I also happened to have watched him pull out of a companies lot. And there isn't an eating place in that area that would be easy for a rig to get into/out of, or for that matter park. Also illegal to park on alot of those streets. Just to let ya know.
Thanks for all the photos--this really is a fun thread this weekend!
Here's a couple of n-scale projects I have underway (obviously, neither one completed yet).
I look forward to WPF every week. You guys always put up some great work and the discussion is the best. Glad this one is going into Tuesday. I just finished this Labelle tank car. As you look at it, keep in mind that it is almost entirely wood and metal, even the tank is wood (wrapped with embossed paper):
Phil, I'm not a rocket scientist; they are my students.
Nice Truss rod early tank car!
Shouldn't the name be changed to weekly photo fun??
Mike