dcfixer wrote: Sorry it took so long to reply. I fully understand how excited one can get in this hobby.I have a Walthers Pullman 6-6-4 in UP colors. I think it's the same floorplan. Your car may be an ex UP car. I think there's a couple of floor plans. Try vols 13 & 14 of the Pullman Standard Library by Randall & Anderson, and possibly in vol 7, The Passenger Car Library by Randall. They're all great references anyway, and worth having in your library. Your specific car may be in one of the other volumes of the set. I presently just have those three, so that's all I can talk about. Did you try the Prototyper's forum? I've received some good leads from some of them. Have fun.DC
Sorry it took so long to reply. I fully understand how excited one can get in this hobby.
I have a Walthers Pullman 6-6-4 in UP colors. I think it's the same floorplan. Your car may be an ex UP car. I think there's a couple of floor plans. Try vols 13 & 14 of the Pullman Standard Library by Randall & Anderson, and possibly in vol 7, The Passenger Car Library by Randall. They're all great references anyway, and worth having in your library. Your specific car may be in one of the other volumes of the set. I presently just have those three, so that's all I can talk about. Did you try the Prototyper's forum? I've received some good leads from some of them.
Have fun.
DC
The biggest problem is that the Passenger Car Library books aren't available in my local library...I've checked. In fact, the local library doesn't have much in the way of railroad books at all.
As for the car, I don't know if the UP cars are the same. This one is a Pullman plan 4099 car, assigned to pool duty.
I forgot completely about the prototype forum. Thanks for the suggestion!
Robert Beaty
The Laughing Hippie
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The CF-7...a waste of a perfectly good F-unit!
Then it comes to be that the soothing light at the
end of your tunnel, Was just a freight train coming
your way. -Metallica, No Leaf Clover
twhite wrote: Antonio--What a GREAT post--and what a helpful discussion you've started! Just a note--Smitty was right when he said that the Prieser seated figures can be used without any major modifications. I just recently finished putting together a 1950 "Royal Gorge" using both standard and streamlined equipment from Walthers, IHC and Con-Cor (and scratching an interior for the Con-Cor dome car) and the Prieser figures fit perfectly--even in the Walther's diner, which is a bear to populate because of tight clearances. The Priesers are 'pricey' (comes out to about $1 per figure in their 36-figure package) but they are also available unpainted for quite a bit less. I was able to populate the train with about 1-1/2 packages and use the leftovers for my Con-Cor Pioneer Zephyr, so it worked out pretty well all around. They're VERY indivudual looking passengers--not just the standard stuff--each one seems to have a distinct 'personality', and it makes watching the train go by really interesting. Great post. Thanks for offering it. Tom
Antonio--
What a GREAT post--and what a helpful discussion you've started!
Just a note--Smitty was right when he said that the Prieser seated figures can be used without any major modifications. I just recently finished putting together a 1950 "Royal Gorge" using both standard and streamlined equipment from Walthers, IHC and Con-Cor (and scratching an interior for the Con-Cor dome car) and the Prieser figures fit perfectly--even in the Walther's diner, which is a bear to populate because of tight clearances. The Priesers are 'pricey' (comes out to about $1 per figure in their 36-figure package) but they are also available unpainted for quite a bit less. I was able to populate the train with about 1-1/2 packages and use the leftovers for my Con-Cor Pioneer Zephyr, so it worked out pretty well all around. They're VERY indivudual looking passengers--not just the standard stuff--each one seems to have a distinct 'personality', and it makes watching the train go by really interesting.
Great post. Thanks for offering it.
Tom
Thanks very much Tom. I greatly enjoy modeling passenger equipment. I've seen Preiser figures on ebay go for some decent prices. I'll start keeping an eye out for them.
"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"
In 1946 Boston & Maine purchased 16 P-S lightweight coaches, 4 combines and 4 diners. Half were assigned to B&M and half to Maine Central, which was owned by B&M at the time. As delivered all the cars were stainless steel with a maroon stripe on the windows. After MEC split off from B&M in 1955, they started repainting the window stripes on their cars green, but some remained maroon until the end of passenger service. Accupaint Maroon and Green are good colors for the stripes; for decals use Microscale Decal Set 87-863, Assorted New England Passenger Cars, B&M, MEC, BAR (1945-70)
For interior colors:
Coaches has 3 color schemes (I do not know which car had which color):
Blue - 4 CarsCeiling Light BlueWalls "Darker" blue Seats RedFloor Blue under seats, brown elsewhere
Green - 6 CarsCeiling Light GreenWalls "Darker" green Seats RedFloor Green under seats, brown elsewhere
Yellow -6 CarsCeiling Pale yellowWalls "Darker" yellow Seats BlueFloor Blue under seats, brown elsewhere
Smoking Rooms all CarsCeiling Light BlueWalls "Darker" blue Seats RedFloor Blue under seats, brown elsewhere
CombinesMain Seating AreaCeiling Light BlueWalls "Darker" blue Seats RedFloor Blue under seats, brown elsewhereSmoking RoomCeiling Light BlueWalls Pale yellowSeats RedFloor Blue under seats, brown elsewhere
DinersMain Dining AreaCeiling Pale yellowWalls "Darker" yellow with wood panel Formica above windowsSeats RedFloor Dark BlueBar - Lounge AreaCeiling Light BlueWalls Pale yellowSeats Alternating Red and BlueFloor Dark BlueKitchenEquipment Stainless SteelPantry Service Counter Aluminum roll-up screen with wood-grain Formica paneling on corridor side
A good reference is Passenger Trains of Northern New England in the Streamline Era, Kevin J Holland, TLC Publishing, 2004
George In Midcoast Maine, 'bout halfway up the Rockland branch
Outstanding G Paine
Quick question: Did Boston & Maine have passenger cars connect and run through to the New Haven Railroad?
The 1941 NHRR Consist book shows 5 parlors and 13 sleepers in joint B&M and NH service.
Train No. 124 - State of Maine Express NY-Portland shows 1 B&M Combine.
The 1951 book shows 4 sleepers with B&M ownership, East Dover, Gounod, Sacoma abd Shore Lark.
Train 124 State of Maine Express shows 1 B&M Combine and 1 B&M Coach. On Saturday there is also a B&M RPO. It probably ran Portland to NYC and returned.
I don't have any later books, but I am looking for 1 1956 book.
wt259 wrote:Regarding G Paine's post, can anyone post similar info for other railroad's passenger equipment. I've searched q station and other sites, but can't find info on Santa Fe business car interiors. I've got 4 WKW Chief cars that I'd like to turn into business cars, but I'm stumped on interior colors.
wt259, which cars do you have? Typically, the ceilings were painted Turquoise, the walls a light buff/tan and green carpeting. The fabric on the coach seats were a blue/green mixture with the sides light blue. The seat pedestals were stainless steel. In the sleepers, the sofa's in the bedrooms, compartments and drawingrooms were Pullman Red while the sofa's in the roomettes were Pullman Green. The chairs for the compartments and drawingrooms were the same color as the sofas. The sofa's in the mens lounges were leather as were the seats in the womens lounges. In some chair cars, the sofas and chairs in the lounges were the same color as the coach seats. I don't have any recollections of the interior colors for the lounge and dining cars. I couldn't even tell you the colors for the Hi-levels. The full domes, the coach seats were blue/green and light blue. The sofa's were light tan/buff and the booth seats were rust colored. I post photos of my ATSF 44 seat chair car once completed for my business train.
Charlie
MP 53 on the BNSF Topeka Sub
Charlie wrote: wt259 wrote:Regarding G Paine's post, can anyone post similar info for other railroad's passenger equipment. I've searched q station and other sites, but can't find info on Santa Fe business car interiors. I've got 4 WKW Chief cars that I'd like to turn into business cars, but I'm stumped on interior colors. wt259, which cars do you have? Typically, the ceilings were painted Turquoise, the walls a light buff/tan and green carpeting. The fabric on the coach seats were a blue/green mixture with the sides light blue. The seat pedestals were stainless steel. In the sleepers, the sofa's in the bedrooms, compartments and drawingrooms were Pullman Red while the sofa's in the roomettes were Pullman Green. The chairs for the compartments and drawingrooms were the same color as the sofas. The sofa's in the mens lounges were leather as were the seats in the womens lounges. In some chair cars, the sofas and chairs in the lounges were the same color as the coach seats. I don't have any recollections of the interior colors for the lounge and dining cars. I couldn't even tell you the colors for the Hi-levels. The full domes, the coach seats were blue/green and light blue. The sofa's were light tan/buff and the booth seats were rust colored. I post photos of my ATSF 44 seat chair car once completed for my business train.Charlie
Somewhere I posted the interior colors for the hi level cars. I will re-post that info when I get home and find the paperwork on this. I seem to remember most all the colors, but want to make sure they are right before posting.
csmith9474 wrote:Somewhere I posted the interior colors for the hi level cars. I will re-post that info when I get home and find the paperwork on this. I seem to remember most all the colors, but want to make sure they are right before posting.
I eagerly await that post...can you guess which cars I'm working on now?
I forgot to mention. On the Cascade and Valley series sleepers, the walls were a light pale green with dark green carpeting. I have many memories of riding in a Valley sleeper on trains 23 and 24 as a kid in the late 60's.
Charlie.
Arjay1969 wrote: csmith9474 wrote: Somewhere I posted the interior colors for the hi level cars. I will re-post that info when I get home and find the paperwork on this. I seem to remember most all the colors, but want to make sure they are right before posting. I eagerly await that post...can you guess which cars I'm working on now?
csmith9474 wrote: Somewhere I posted the interior colors for the hi level cars. I will re-post that info when I get home and find the paperwork on this. I seem to remember most all the colors, but want to make sure they are right before posting.
I lost some of my info, so some of this is from memory, but is accurate.
Chair Cars: The walls above the windows were beige, and below the windows was light blue. The window strip (panels between the windows) was walnut panelling (sp?). The flooring was a mottled brown carpet. The seats had a turquoise cloth.
Diner: The wall colors are the same as the chair cars. The seats and seat backs were burnt orange, with white table cloths. The end panels on the closets, refridgerators, and buffet (waiter stations) were turquoise with stanless steel cabinets and surfaces. The carpet was a mottled green style.
Lounge: Maroon seats upstairs, and beige seating downstairs. The walls and misc. panels were light blue/turquoise.
If anybody has any corrections or additions, please post. I have not seen a color photo of the as built interiors, so the light blue and turquoise colors will be open for interpretation. The turqouise mixture I used for my hi level seats are based on color pics of dome seats from the 500 series P/S built "Pleasure Domes". Below are some pics of interiors I painted for my hi level cars....
Charlie,
I have the Kato business car, the WKW diner, coach and dormitory-lounge, all in ATSF for my mini business car fleet. This is just what I needed to finish them. Thanks for the info.
Wayne
AntonioFP45 wrote: Quick question: Did Boston & Maine have passenger cars connect and run through to the New Haven Railroad?
Yes, in fact I have seen a photo of a summer camp train (i.e., taking kids from southern New England to summer camps in Maine), that has a NH lightweight coach with some kids getting off "somewhere in Maine".
There were a number of pass through agreements with eastern railroads up to the end of passenger service. There was one that ran a Pullman car from Washington DC up to Bar Harbor, ME (actually ended up in Trenton, as the rails did not go over to the island). Another would go from New York City and end up in St John, New Brunswick. Baggage cars and mail from NYC were common and on the schedule. There were lots of other destinations all over Maine and New Hampshire to serve the summer trade in the days when famlies would spend the whole summer at a resort; dad would commute from work on the weekends. A good reference is "Passenger Trains of Northern New England in the Streamline Era"
Thanks for the info on the NH/B&M connections, guys!
The link below leads to a shot of the rear section of a Rio Grande Vista-Dome Observation Lounge as it appears in 1970, used on the California Zephyr. I wonder if this is the same car that came to Tampa in the early 80s on a tour that I was actually able to board and take photos.
http://www.jerryapp.com/pix3/ja-r740.jpg The photo was taken by Jerry Appleman.
Here is some interior photos of my Rivarossi ACF 44 seat coach. I tried to model it in the early 50s. The furnishing kits are Red Cap Line (seats & restrooms) and Plano (blinds).
The next photo shows the shadows cast by the overhead luggage racks.
More new interior photos of this car can be seen at http://uphonation.com/
http://uphonation.com
DCFixer,
That is jaw-dropping work! I've seen many others, but honestly this is the most impressive passenger car interior I've ever seen. I've downloaded your photos.
I also saved the photos on the "hippie pickups" on your thread. I hope to try this method for my varnish.
Thanks so much for sharing!
And just as I'm about to post pics of my first scratchbuilt interior, DC comes on and posts pics of some absolutely gorgeous interiors. Now I'm too scared to post photos!
Nice work as always, DC!
Arjay1969 wrote: And just as I'm about to post pics of my first scratchbuilt interior, DC comes on and posts pics of some absolutely gorgeous interiors. Now I'm too scared to post photos! Nice work as always, DC!
Thanks, Robert. If you have pics, you better post them. There's different levels of acceptable, quality detail. It's all good, and I like to see it all. What really impresses me is all the "jaw dropping" layouts and scenic work that I see on this forum. I can not imagine the time and work involved in that.
I just hope my work gives birth to new ideas and inspires others to do better than me. I want to explore and peek around interiors of different roads and eras - right here in this forum.
Post away.
AntonioFP45 wrote: DCFixer, That is jaw-dropping work! I've seen many others, but honestly this is the most impressive passenger car interior I've ever seen. I've downloaded your photos.I also saved the photos on the "hippie pickups" on your thread. I hope to try this method for my varnish. Thanks so much for sharing!
Thank you, Sir.
I have been having some issues with lighting for taking photos. Matching the interior LED light and exterior flood lighting has been a frustration in exposure and white balance. More on this later.
Thanks again, Antonio.
Here's a photo you'll might like. Especially DCfixer.
http://www.trainorders.com/images2/view.php?259306
Charlie wrote:Here's a photo you'll might like. Especially DCfixer.Charliehttp://www.trainorders.com/images2/view.php?259306
It says I have to become a member, and that costs. Is there some other way to see it?
dcfixer wrote: Charlie wrote: Here's a photo you'll might like. Especially DCfixer.Charliehttp://www.trainorders.com/images2/view.php?259306It says I have to become a member, and that costs. Is there some other way to see it?DC
Charlie wrote: Here's a photo you'll might like. Especially DCfixer.Charliehttp://www.trainorders.com/images2/view.php?259306
DC, I forget somtimes that with TO, you must be a member to view englarged photos. Try this link.
http://www.trainorders.com/discussion/read.php?3,1617907
I like it a lot! Nice scenes, too. Looks like about $5000-$6000 worth of trains there. I wish! Are those Overland, Coach Yard or what? I dream of some day being able to take my finished heritage train to nice, big layout (like the ones I see in this forum) for a major run and photo session.
Thanks for posting this, Charlie.
dcfixer wrote: I like it a lot! Nice scenes, too. Looks like about $5000-$6000 worth of trains there. I wish! Are those Overland, Coach Yard or what? I dream of some day being able to take my finished heritage train to nice, big layout (like the ones I see in this forum) for a major run and photo session. Thanks for posting this, Charlie.DC
DC, your welcome. The whole train is by Overland Models. The cost is roughly 3500.00 give or take 200.00. The only UP business car Coach Yard did was Arden and is still available.
Hello every one,
I'am new to passenger train modeling and have been getting Con-Cor 72 ft. Daylight
cars as gifts. They have no interiors or lights. Can I get these anywhere? I can't even
figure out how to take them apart. Anybody have an answer? other than getting different cars.
Phil, CEO, Eastern Sierra Pacific Railroad. We know where you are going, before you do!
When it comes to putting people in passenger cars I don't think that every seat should be occupied. It looks more realistic to have some seats empty.
I haven't seen one yet but I am told the best lighting is the kit sold by rapido. First, no brass rubbers on the wheels that produce drag and flicker. Second, you turn them off and on with a reed switch.
This is a link that was provided on another thread from DonZ where he was helping Coborn.
Has interior & exterior shots of the ex-GN domes. Exterior shots paint schemes are in Amtrak and American Orient Express. The interior shots, from what I can tell, are of the beautiful upholstery job performed by AOE.
If this helps, I've noticed that on all of the interior photos of domes (standard and full length) the skeletal structure that supports the glass, including the center plate that runs the length of the ceiling, is white.
http://trainweb.org/web_lurker/Q1395/
Thanks again DonZ.
Smitty thanks for recommending that it be updated here so that future models can use this thread as research reference.
Sierra Man wrote: Hello every one, I'am new to passenger train modeling and have been getting Con-Cor 72 ft. Daylightcars as gifts. They have no interiors or lights. Can I get these anywhere? I can't evenfigure out how to take them apart. Anybody have an answer? other than getting different cars.
Good news: Palace Car Company makes interiors for these cars, they're not "one piece" plastic ones like Rivarossi or IHC cars have, but they're not hard to do either.
Palace Car Co.
I think the Con-Cor roofs snap off?? Walthers cars have tabs that have like little hooks on the end; I usually snip the "hooks" off and just leave the tabs. There's enough friction to hold the roof in place without the hooks locking it on.
CJBeard wrote: When it comes to putting people in passenger cars I don't think that every seat should be occupied. It looks more realistic to have some seats empty.
I agree, even in say an 80 seat coach spreading out 12-15 people thru the car will actually make it look pretty full when viewed thru the windows of the car.