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WPF 10/16 - 10/18 Locked

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Posted by wedudler on Tuesday, October 20, 2009 2:11 AM

 I've participated in the FREMO meeting this weekend. I've made quite a few pictures and a video with narrow gauge. This here shows my friends Pete's "Joevalley.

Wolfgang

Pueblo & Salt Lake RR

Come to us http://www.westportterminal.de          my videos        my blog

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Posted by IVRW on Monday, October 19, 2009 9:23 AM
Amazing WPF everyone.

~G4

19 Years old, modeling the Cowlitz, Chehalis, and Cascade Railroad of Western Washington in 1927 in 6X6 feet.

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Posted by secondhandmodeler on Sunday, October 18, 2009 10:17 PM

 Tis the season for train trips!

Though I took many more pictures than this on our trip, I don't want to bore you.  Here are a few snaps from the train ride from Minneapolis to Winona MN.  We basically followed the Mississippi river the whole time.  We ended up riding in the Amtrak coach.  Oh it's old alright, 1985!SmileOh well, it had a nice ride with clean bathrooms!

Corey
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Posted by alfadawg01 on Sunday, October 18, 2009 9:43 PM

Ken, you are having waaaaay too much fun.....

Bill

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"Never try to teach a pig to sing.  It wastes your time and annoys the pig"

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Posted by cudaken on Sunday, October 18, 2009 9:33 PM

 This is Richard Head with Channel 5 Action news with a breaking story! There has been a train wreck on the south side of Kingsdown by K-10 mining. A north bound Conrail freight train lost part of its train by K-10 mining while heading to the Kingsdown yard. Spoke person for Conrail stated "we had a coupler fail while passing K-10 Mining company, we contacted the dispatcher as soon as the engineer knew he lost part of his train". Kingsdown yard master is not available for comment at this time.

 We now switch to our Eye In The Sky, take it Guy. This is Guy Great in news copper 5 over the wreck site. Seems a south bound Mono coal train hit the stranded Conrail cars by K-10 Mining company. There where 3 tank cars in the wreck, one went over the 100 foot cliff. At this point authorities do not know the content of the rupture tank cars and evaluating the men from K-10 mining.

 Few pictures from the ground crew before the forced evacuation.

 

 This engine was found near the wreck, but it seems it may not be involved.

 

 OK, this wrech happened last night while I was posting on this site. As stated the 40 box car came off the freight drag. I missed it till it was to late. White tanker on it side matching Walther's tank car went over the side! Disapprove Still looking for missing parts.

 Cuda Ken, no HO pepole where lost for the post.

I hate Rust

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Posted by wm3798 on Sunday, October 18, 2009 4:35 PM

Not much on the workbench this week, although there's still plenty of work to do...  This week's highlight was volunteering as a car host on the CRHS Conrail Express on Saturday.

We got a very early start, 4 a.m. ish, but it was extremely cool to be below decks at 30th Street in wee hours...


The Juniata Terminal E units, as usual, were impeccable, standing at the ready to pull our train of over 700 merry makers around southeast PA.


We tried to get Vanna White, but she wasn't available, so we settled for Sean...  As one of the primary organizers of the trip, Sean deserves a huge amount of credit.



The weather was pretty dismal, but having the opportunity to ride the Port Road was not to be missed.  Due to the rain and overcast, you couldn't get much leaf-peeping in, but just being in the remote areas where only the train has access was pretty remarkable.  It was also cool to see the several power generating dams that line the Susquehanna.  The view above was taken as we crossed from the east side of the river to the west via the Shock's Mill bridge.


After rolling through Enola Yard, we crossed back over at Rockville Bridge.  This was one of the few times I could witness the engines at work.  Unfortunately, the rain and slow speeds through the yard left a lot of spots on the windows...


At Harrisburg, we got a short platform break.  Here, we got to enjoy the company of 4859, which is owned by the Harrisburg Chapter of NRHS.  It's noted to be the first electrified locomotive to pull a train into the Harrisburg Terminal after the wires were strung, so it's displayed there along with a wooden caboose.



I had the pleasure of working with Dave Foxx, as well as Jonathan, the guy from the NRHS working our car.  Here we are with 72 of our new closest friends...



It was a great day, and a very memorable experience.  Thanks go to Russ, Sean and Ed, who extended the invitation to me and Dave.  We truly had a blast!

Lee

Route of the Alpha Jets  www.wmrywesternlines.net

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Posted by 0-6-0 on Sunday, October 18, 2009 1:34 PM

Hello great work this weekend everyone. I started a new project it's the Buckmaster truck & radiator repair by Evergreen hill designs. Here are some work in progress shots.

This is a craftsmen kit so I had to do all the framing. It took a week to get this far. This is my first kit by this company and what a kit it is. So far this is one of the best kits I have built easy to work with and lots of detail parts it even came with a sink.As I get more done I will post more pics. Have a good weekend Frank

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Posted by ac4400fan on Sunday, October 18, 2009 1:28 PM

 Hi Guys! Been awhile since i posted anything. Nice pictures everyone! This is one i took a bit ago i was working on this scean last spring but it got to hot so i had to stop,Now just picked up where i left off and im working at it little by little.

 

 

Have a great Weekend.

GO> Chicago NorthWestern.BNSF& Illinios Central, AC4400 ALLTHE WAY! DREAM IT! PLAN IT! BUILD IT! Smile, Wink & Grin
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Posted by tomkat-13 on Sunday, October 18, 2009 9:13 AM

 Dave, the video of the Sep running session was GREAT!.....

 

Loading dock at Prestage Tool & Gear, Hawk Point Mo. on the Missouri & Arkansas Railway.

Here is the link for my vast collection of signs for your layout & buildings. Please feel free to copy for your own use. They are for HO but can be re-sized for any scale. Most are pre-1970 ....So check them out!

http://www.trainboard.com/grapevine/album.php?albumid=721

 

 

I model MKT & CB&Q in Missouri. A MUST SEE LINK: Great photographs from glassplate negatives of St Louis 1914-1917!!!! http://www.usgennet.org/usa/mo/county/stlouis/kempland/glassplate.htm Boeing Employee RR Club-St Louis http://www.berrc-stl.com/
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Posted by howmus on Saturday, October 17, 2009 9:28 PM

I went on a trip with the Central New York Division of the NMRA today.  They traveled from Syracuse, NY to Medina, NY to visit the Medina RR Museum.  First stop was Ridge Road Station, a Train/Model/Hobby/Christmas all year around store.  Inside there is a huge "G" scale layout.  A couple of photos:

Then we traveled on to the Medina Railroad Museum which also has a huge layout that fills most of  an old NYC Freight house.  This one is HO.  Here is a shot from just past the halfway point of the layout.  The Dispatcher's Office is at the halfway point of the layout and the florescent lighting in the middle goes to the other end of the layout.......

Here is a couple more of that layout:

This is the 1/1 scale loco that pulled the NYC 20th. Century Special cars we rode on for a couple of hours:

73

 

Ray Seneca Lake, Ontario, and Western R.R. (S.L.O.&W.) in HO

We'll get there sooner or later! 

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Posted by Driline on Saturday, October 17, 2009 8:31 PM

rs2mike
Wish you could see what he is doing.

 

Yea, too bad I'm about 9 hours away..... I've got family in Pittsburgh, so next time I'm out that way I'll swing by.Smile

Modeling the Davenport Rock Island & Northwestern 1995 in HO
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Posted by rs2mike on Saturday, October 17, 2009 7:53 PM

Driline your trees are awesome.  Your gp- or sd- whatever it was you sent jerry to weather is.......well he said he teased you with a vid of the working beacon....ahhhh yea

it is nice man.  I wish I had 1/2 is tallent.  I was over his place today to help with his layout.  Very neat building.  I learned a lot on how I am going to build my eventual layout.  Can't wait to get back and help some more.  He is a wealth of info that I am glad to suck up.  Wish you could see what he is doing.

Have a good weekend all

 

alco's forever!!!!! Majoring in HO scale Minorig in O scale:)

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Posted by blownout cylinder on Saturday, October 17, 2009 7:04 PM

CNJ831
Milwaukee, Racine & Troy #1023 is hard at work setting out one of the company's gons on this brisk mid October afternoon

OK---who snarfled the eras up?!Whistling Great shot there!!

Any argument carried far enough will end up in Semantics--Hartz's law of rhetoric Emerald. Leemer and Southern The route of the Sceptre Express Barry

I just started my blog site...more stuff to come...

http://modeltrainswithmusic.blogspot.ca/

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Posted by Driline on Saturday, October 17, 2009 3:16 PM

P&Slocal

I love the aspens. Som eof the detail stuff that you guys are doing is great, but with my oversized fingers and ability to drop objects without reason, I am skeptical of my abilities to do detail work on fine scale.

It was in this pic that I think I found the answer to fine detail work (see lower left hand corner of pic for empty Crown Royal bottle).

Driline

duckdogger

Driline - very nice tree work.  Kit? If so, whose?

 


 

And yes, its still contains alcohol. Albeit a little more potent. 91% isopropyl alcohol to be exact. I use it with an eye dropper as a wetting agent for scenery.

Modeling the Davenport Rock Island & Northwestern 1995 in HO
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Posted by CNJ831 on Saturday, October 17, 2009 2:12 PM

Milwaukee, Racine & Troy #1023 is hard at work setting out one of the company's gons on this brisk mid October afternoon.

 

CNJ831

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Posted by P&Slocal on Saturday, October 17, 2009 10:32 AM

I love the aspens. Som eof the detail stuff that you guys are doing is great, but with my oversized fingers and ability to drop objects without reason, I am skeptical of my abilities to do detail work on fine scale.

It was in this pic that I think I found the answer to fine detail work (see lower left hand corner of pic for empty Crown Royal bottle).

Driline

duckdogger

Driline - very nice tree work.  Kit? If so, whose?

 


Robert H. Shilling II

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Posted by RRCanuck on Saturday, October 17, 2009 9:05 AM

Tyler, the 3 exposures I used each time for a given image were pretty small aperture - f22 or more, with exposures typically around 3 seconds.  But when the foreground is only 4 inches from the lens, even a very small aperture won't give me clarity at distances of 4 feet or so.

I looked at the Helicon site and I think they want $30 for a limited time license - a perpetual license if I recall correctly was over $100...which is why I decided to use photoshop, since I already have at my disposal.

Anyway, it was a fun, if laborious exercise.

Cheers.

 

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, October 17, 2009 8:52 AM

RRCanuck

This week's contribution is not so much about modeling (admittedly mediocre) but photography.  Recent articles in MR and past posts here about methods to enhance depth of field (like Helicon software) were the inspiration for this week's pics.  I don't have Helicon, but figured I could achieve similar results taking 3 exposures of each scene that were identical except for the focus point, then using photoshop to "stitch" them together.  The objective was to achieve zero-to-infinity focus.

I have 2 things to say about this project:  1. It was not nearly as easy as I thought it would be, and 2. Looking at photos is a great way to see all the mistakes you've made.  You just don't realize how much you need to improve things until you look at your photos.  A bit sobering, frankly.

If you have a camera that can go up to a high aperture, you can use that instead of / in conjunction with HeliconFocus to get a high depth of field. I shoot at F/36 for my photos and get plenty of depth of field, with the camera mounted on a tripod for the long exposure shots.

That being said, the new camera I'm considering (the Canon SX1) only goes up to F/5.6, so I will presumably get to learn how to use HeliconFocus! I believe it is free (or there's a similar version that's free), and I would imagine that it's a whole lot easier than Photoshop! I've tried to manually create HDR images using Photoshop 6.0, and it didn't work so great and was pretty tricky...I would imagine the effort is similar with depth of field.

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Posted by georgev on Saturday, October 17, 2009 7:15 AM

Driline

duckdogger

Driline - very nice tree work.  Kit? If so, whose?

 

The kit is called "Forest in a Flash" by Janes trains. I don't think they are available anymore. My hobby shop has had them for 15 years now and only has a few left. I'm not sure what kind of plant it is, but you do the following to make the trees.

1) Remove the small leaves found on the stem.

2) Paint the branches white

3) Wrap 2 or 3 branches together with wax string

4) Set the tree in a foam base with wax paper.

5) Spread white latex caulk up the trunk

6 Paint the trunk white

7) Use a fine black sharpie to make lines on the trunk and larger limbs.

More trees to add.....

 ...snip.....

That looks like peppergrass, also known as "Candy Tuft" available in the craft stores.  I have used it with moderate success but was never very happy with it.  There's a shot of a couple small ones painted as fall trees.  The problem I have had is the trunks are so thin and attempts to wrap multiple stems with clay or tape to make a larger tree just  didn't look good.  But I never thought of using caulk.  Gonna try that! 

George V.

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Posted by BIG JERR on Saturday, October 17, 2009 7:03 AM

great work all,love my weekend morning coffee and picts . they go together nice.......thanks for your effort's

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Posted by CNJ831 on Saturday, October 17, 2009 6:55 AM

Jeff - Kudos to you on your latest image. In my opinion, it's the best shot you've posted to date. You've come a long way in the past couple of years with your modelling and photography.

CNJ831

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Posted by jeffrey-wimberly on Saturday, October 17, 2009 4:45 AM

 

Running Bear, Sundown, Louisiana
          Joined June, 2004

Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running Bear
Space Mouse for president!
15 year veteran fire fighter
Collector of Apple //e's
Running Bear Enterprises
History Channel Club life member.
beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam


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Posted by cudaken on Friday, October 16, 2009 11:21 PM

 Looks like my weekend is not going to be that fun! It will be spent sorting out the spur from K-10 mine to the A line. First fixed a curve that 50 foot cars did not like, then a turn out my Big Boy did not like. Now the Y6 B does not like curve the 50 cars do like. Then the Big Boy decides it doesn't like the turn out again? RSD 15 does not like any of it! M1A is fine with the first turn out that the Big Boy does not like,but does not like the second turn out all the other engines are fine with.

 Only engines that are fine with ever thing are the F-3's.

 Ken, laying rail again, and again and again! Big Smile 

I hate Rust

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Posted by fiatfan on Friday, October 16, 2009 8:47 PM

 As a tribute to the late, great Athearn blue box kit, I assembled all 26 of mine in one spot for a family photo.  Not shown are another 18 still unassembled.

 

The Great Northern in the center is my first HO purchase back in about 1962.  The UP boxcar next to it was my first and only attempt at painting and decaling.

 

Tom

Life is simple - eat, drink, play with trains!

Go Big Red!

PA&ERR "If you think you are doing something stupid, you're probably right!"

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Posted by RRCanuck on Friday, October 16, 2009 8:40 PM

Off to another great start this week.  ford86 - gorgeous paint jobs.

This week's contribution is not so much about modeling (admittedly mediocre) but photography.  Recent articles in MR and past posts here about methods to enhance depth of field (like Helicon software) were the inspiration for this week's pics.  I don't have Helicon, but figured I could achieve similar results taking 3 exposures of each scene that were identical except for the focus point, then using photoshop to "stitch" them together.  The objective was to achieve zero-to-infinity focus.

I have 2 things to say about this project:  1. It was not nearly as easy as I thought it would be, and 2. Looking at photos is a great way to see all the mistakes you've made.  You just don't realize how much you need to improve things until you look at your photos.  A bit sobering, frankly.

Cheers.

 

 

 

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Posted by Driline on Friday, October 16, 2009 6:47 PM

duckdogger

Driline - very nice tree work.  Kit? If so, whose?

 

The kit is called "Forest in a Flash" by Janes trains. I don't think they are available anymore. My hobby shop has had them for 15 years now and only has a few left. I'm not sure what kind of plant it is, but you do the following to make the trees.

1) Remove the small leaves found on the stem.

2) Paint the branches white

3) Wrap 2 or 3 branches together with wax string

4) Set the tree in a foam base with wax paper.

5) Spread white latex caulk up the trunk

6 Paint the trunk white

7) Use a fine black sharpie to make lines on the trunk and larger limbs.

More trees to add.....


Modeling the Davenport Rock Island & Northwestern 1995 in HO
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Posted by rs2mike on Friday, October 16, 2009 4:52 PM

Hey all,  Driline nice trees.  Was that sedum?   No pics again this week from me.  I have been busy doing all sorts of thing.  Some mrr and lots of home stuff. 

This week I got my 2 atlas Rs-1 painted in the home road scheme.  Got them detailed with rotary beacon, antenna and gps dome.  I lightly weathered the frames for now.  Later I will lightly weather the bodies but for right now I like the way they are.  I also painted and detailed a 3rd body and now just waiting on money to buy a frame and trucks.  I already have the motor and spline and worms for it.  I also learned how to properly use a multi meter.  I also attempted to put a decoder in an IHC mother hubbard but lost that battle as the motor pulled a min of 6 amps.  Wierd I thought can motors were low draw.  I am also knee deep into converting and rewirirg for dcc 2 athearn sw-9 switchers.  I have one done but the other has the metal sideframes and I can't seem to find anything to solder to so I have bid on a set on ebay.  They will be detailed with beacons, antennas, and gps domes and have led lights wired in.  I will see if I get the house work done enough to snap some pics. 

Have a great weekend everyone.

 

alco's forever!!!!! Majoring in HO scale Minorig in O scale:)

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Posted by duckdogger on Friday, October 16, 2009 2:31 PM

Driline - very nice tree work.  Kit? If so, whose?

Trains. Cooking. Cycling. So many choices but so little time.
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Posted by reklein on Friday, October 16, 2009 1:14 PM

Heres a couple shots of a drovers caboose at Collier Bluff. BILL

In Lewiston Idaho,where they filmed Breakheart pass.

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