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WPF March 11/13

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  • Member since
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  • From: Northern VA
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WPF March 11/13
Posted by jwhitten on Thursday, March 10, 2011 5:48 PM

 

I get to start WPF this week...

With my new (to me) brass Pennsy M1a -- my *very first* brass locomotive !!!

(I wish the picture was better, but I had to take it with my cell-phone camera.)

 

Brass PRR M1a Locomotive

 

Brass PRR M1a Locomotive

Brass PRR M1a Locomotive

 

I'm looking forward to seeing how well it runs (or, um... *if* it runs :-) I reckon I'm probably going to re-motor it in any case and put a sound decoder in it.

John

Modeling the South Pennsylvania Railroad ("The Hilltop Route") in the late 50's
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Posted by PRR_in_AZ on Thursday, March 10, 2011 5:53 PM

Nice loco, John.  Brass is a slippery slope, at least for me.  You can never be satisfied with just one!

Enjoy!

Chris

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Posted by MAbruce on Thursday, March 10, 2011 5:57 PM

Wow, off to an early start this week.  But that's okay - it makes up for some late starts.  Big Smile

Nice acquisition John.  Hopefully it will run...

I recently had some fun with my photo software to make this sunset scene:

And for those of you who frown upon such photo manipulation, here's a shot of my layout without any digital trickery:

  • Member since
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Posted by jwhitten on Thursday, March 10, 2011 6:05 PM

MAbruce

Wow, off to an early start this week.  But that's okay - it makes up for some late starts.  Big Smile

Nice acquisition John.  Hopefully it will run...

I recently had some fun with my photo software to make this sunset scene:

http://www.trainboard.com/railimages/data/500/Belmar2043b.jpg

And for those of you who frown upon such photo manipulation, here's a shot of my layout without any digital trickery:

http://www.trainboard.com/railimages/data/500/Belmar2045.jpg

 

Wow! Those are great photos-- not sure which one I like better.... your layout really looks nice!

 

John

Modeling the South Pennsylvania Railroad ("The Hilltop Route") in the late 50's
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Posted by jwhitten on Thursday, March 10, 2011 6:08 PM

PRR_in_AZ

Nice loco, John.  Brass is a slippery slope, at least for me.  You can never be satisfied with just one!

Enjoy!

Chris

 

Yeah, you're probably right about that. Laugh My goal is to acquire about 4 or 5 more of the M1a's (or M1b's, either one) and a few H9's or H10's, which as far as I know, the H9/10's are only made in brass.

John

Modeling the South Pennsylvania Railroad ("The Hilltop Route") in the late 50's
  • Member since
    September 2014
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Posted by PRR_in_AZ on Thursday, March 10, 2011 6:13 PM

Yeah, I have an H-6SB and an H-9.  Both brass and very cool.  I want to have multiples too.  For some reason I'm leaning more toward L-1 (2-8-2) Mikados.  They always seem to get overlooked by Pennsy guys.  I have one I'm finishing up painting and will post pics soon.

Chris

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Posted by jwhitten on Thursday, March 10, 2011 6:17 PM

PRR_in_AZ

Yeah, I have an H-6SB and an H-9.  Both brass and very cool.  I want to have multiples too.  For some reason I'm leaning more toward L-1 (2-8-2) Mikados.  They always seem to get overlooked by Pennsy guys.  I have one I'm finishing up painting and will post pics soon.

Chris

 

I have been laying in a supply of K4's to kitbash into L1's. I'll keep a few as K4's of course :-) There are a lot of similarities between the two, by design.

 

John

Modeling the South Pennsylvania Railroad ("The Hilltop Route") in the late 50's
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Posted by selector on Thursday, March 10, 2011 6:50 PM

I am seriously envious of that fine brass M1!!  Nice locomotive.   Love Bruce's sunset image with the long low trestle, too.

Mine shows a shot angle never shown on my layout.  I have a Santa Fe 4-8-4 pulling freight that needs to get where it is going quickly.

Crandell

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Posted by Packers#1 on Thursday, March 10, 2011 7:23 PM

Great, EARLY (:D) start! 

John, that brass is GORGEOUS! The cell phone pic still conveys all the detail!

Sweet shots as well guys!

I don't have much, did a bit of work today, namely painted a bit of foam, smoothed out some road, and added a couple of "fill trees." nothing pic worthy

Sawyer Berry

Clemson University c/o 2018

Building a protolanced industrial park layout

 

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Posted by Grampys Trains on Thursday, March 10, 2011 8:05 PM

Congrats on acquiring that fine looking Mountain, John.

Love the sunset, MAbruce.

That's an excellent photo, Crandell.

An I1sa leads a West Bound coal drag. DJ.

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Posted by howmus on Thursday, March 10, 2011 8:51 PM

Early weekend? Being retired i have 6 saturdays and one Sunday in every week so today is great for starting the WPF Thread....

DJ!  Wow....  Love it!

I've been painting tools for the workbench.  Why?  Well they look better when painted properly.  Wanna see?  Well  Here's the Workbench:



You can get a better Idea of how big it is in this photo.  Yes I know I have to do some sanding on the rough edges before I put it in the Engine house....



So what was I painting?  Well a pipe wrench for one thing...



Oh and a hammer....Confused



No THAT is a hammer, not a little sliver in my finger.....

"They're coming to take me away, Ha,Ha......."

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 ChadMichaels on Thursday, March 10, 2011 9:19 PM

here is some shots of my yard...still a work in progress..

 

From the north end of the yard looking South...

From the South end looking North...

Close up from the sout looking North....

Comments and suggestions welcome.

HO Scale modeler of Union Pacific and Iowa Chicago and Eastern Railroads.

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Posted by jacon12 on Thursday, March 10, 2011 9:56 PM

Nothing new from me this week, so I went back into the archives and found a before and after shot of the same corner of my layout.  Seems so long ago...

Jarrell

 HO Scale DCC Modeler of 1950, give or take 30 years.
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Posted by -E-C-Mills on Thursday, March 10, 2011 10:05 PM

Awesome!

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Posted by Colorado_Mac on Thursday, March 10, 2011 11:34 PM

Personally, I love the sunset.  Could never frown on the artistic side of model railroading (and photography).

And the shot of the coal drag?  Fantastic.

 

Count me among the many jealous of that brass loco, too.

Sean

HO Scale CSX Modeler

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Posted by jwar41 on Friday, March 11, 2011 12:13 AM
Start of a new
shop, will be a run through, hope this pic works, having a bit of a prob with them. and this may be too big? This was a larger shop  started last year and cut it down so that this will be a running repair facility (quick turnaround and light maintainance.) There will be a back shop for the heavy repairs later, any how I have some of the red iron done, will scrach a 5 ton overhead crane, oil and water pipeing and such. The bottom pic is  a peeler (tread profiller) which has a few parts lost from being tossed from piller to post LOL Aint great but it is fun      Take Care...John
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Posted by gear-jammer on Friday, March 11, 2011 10:17 AM

Hi gang.  I haven't been in for a while.

Here is my latest project.  This is one of the legs of the wye coming down to the sawmill from the log camp.

John,  Great addition to your layout.  I have dreams of brass.

Bruce,  Digital trickery is fine. Nice sunset.  Are the trees part of the sunset or part of your layout?

Crandell, Nice photo as usual.  Are you photoshopping your backdrops ?

Ray,  That hammer is cool.

Chad,  I am envious of your yard.  It should make for some great switching.

Jarrell, Thanks for sharing the before & after on blending into your backdrop.

Johnwar,  Your shots from inside the shop worked well.  Your greasy workbench is a neat detail.

Sue

Anything is possible if you do not know what you are talking about.

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Posted by MAbruce on Friday, March 11, 2011 11:13 AM

Wow! Those are great photos-- not sure which one I like better.... your layout really looks nice!

 John

Thanks John.

gear-jammer

Bruce,  Digital trickery is fine. Nice sunset.  Are the trees part of the sunset or part of your layout?

 

Sue

Thanks Sue.  The trees are part of my layout.  Only the sunset was added.

That's a very nice scene from your latest project.  The trees look fantastic.

 

  • Member since
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Posted by gear-jammer on Friday, March 11, 2011 11:39 AM

Thanks, Bruce.  I have always enjoyed your photos.

Sue

Anything is possible if you do not know what you are talking about.

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Posted by selector on Friday, March 11, 2011 12:16 PM

Sue, your creation is entirely believable.   Nice job in 'planting' the trees...they are nicely vertical, and they look darned good! Yes

I had to clone the 'sky' in my photo because what is really there is a window face trim, sill, and venetian blinds over a night-time darkness in the window beyond.  What I had to do was to place a piece of blue Dow extruded foam on the window sill, take the image, and then use Sagelight's cloning brush to paint the sky using the blue foam as a reference point.  Takes some doing, but it was a vast improvement over cropping or leaving the window trim and sill visible.

The smoke and the tiny steam column at the front of the stack were created using the clone brush and hues on the side of the boiler and tender.

Crandell

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Posted by Odie on Friday, March 11, 2011 4:22 PM

.

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Posted by robfi on Saturday, March 12, 2011 6:59 AM

trainstuff040.jpg image by robgreatnorth

I got some work done on my module

 

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, March 12, 2011 9:45 AM

My layout is slowly advancing towards a stage where I can enjoy taking photos of it again. The next steps are ordering track, then painting the backdrop and layout surface while waiting for the track to arrive.

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Posted by tarhawk on Saturday, March 12, 2011 10:06 AM

As always very inspiring pics. I have tried to upload a pic. Today I dragged a pic from Apple iPhoto into this reply box easily. But when posted it just showed an "unopenable" link and no pic. Is photobucket the only solution? How bout from Picasa? Sorry to again open this can of worms!

Tarhawk

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Posted by wedudler on Saturday, March 12, 2011 11:33 AM

I've just finished building a coal house for my narrow gauge module Salina.

Wolfgang

Pueblo & Salt Lake RR

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

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Posted by selector on Saturday, March 12, 2011 12:03 PM

tarhawk

As always very inspiring pics. I have tried to upload a pic. Today I dragged a pic from Apple iPhoto into this reply box easily. But when posted it just showed an "unopenable" link and no pic. Is photobucket the only solution? How bout from Picasa? Sorry to again open this can of worms!

Tarhawk

The server doesn't accept  direct uploads from computers.  It will only use a link with the [img] tags at each end to retrieve the appropriate file from a webhost such as photobucket or railimages.com.  They are free for a small gallery of your images which you do upload from your computer.  Get the tagged URL, paste it in a text box here, and you are good to go.

Crandell

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Posted by Tashtego on Saturday, March 12, 2011 12:09 PM

2 from Quincy Yard.

 

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Posted by tarhawk on Saturday, March 12, 2011 7:30 PM

Thanks Crandell.

Tarhawk

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Posted by jeffrey-wimberly on Saturday, March 12, 2011 7:36 PM

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 howmus on Saturday, March 12, 2011 9:09 PM

I decided This week to take a bit of a break from the Engine House project for several reasons.  1.  I have run out of some needed details..  2.  The next part will require me to start building the roof trusses and the roof, and I need to get some information before I proceed. and 3. My workbench is preventing me from doing much other than trying to find stuff lost in the piles of "stuff" on it.  It is a complete disaster and needs to be cleaned.  Only problem is that cleaning, by virtue of a lack of space to put stuff, means moving everything from one messy place to another equal or more messy place.

So I made a plan which I hope will let me organize things a bit better and be able to spend more time making stuff than looking for things to make stuff with.........LaughSmile, Wink & Grin

My work bench came from an old 1800's square piano frame.  It weighs several hundred pounds.  Took myself and my 2 then teenage sons to get it down the cellar stairs a quarter of a century ago.  Almost got crushed doing that as well.  So here is what the thing looked like yesterday:

I had some pegboard laying around and since much of the "stuff" can be hung, I decided to create more peg board area on one end of the old piano bench:

That was where it stood last night.  Today I got a bit more done.  Still have quite a bit more work to do on it and I have to buy more pegs and some storage drawers to use, but it is getting there.  Hopefully by tomorrow night I will have the area cleaned up so I can get back to work on some layout projects.

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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