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Great Lakes Freighter/Resin

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Posted by PATRICK DOUGHERTY on Sunday, February 4, 2018 10:40 AM

I too did the Sylvan kit a few years ago for my Great Lakes themed layout. I found it more difficult than a  styrene kit. It just took me longer, there were no gap problems. I was not able to get the "sun visor" for the pilot house to bond. I called Sylvan direct, they sent me a new one and it worked fine. I elected not to use their stanchions. To much work so I omitted them.

My layout is freestyle Ann Arbor so I purchased a Wright Trak resin caboose kit. I ended up paying for someone to build and paint the kit. I was subsequent able to find brass AA cabooseS.

 

 

 

Tags: Pat D
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Posted by hardcoalcase on Wednesday, October 26, 2016 2:14 PM

Ahhh... so it is.  Nice work!

Jim

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Posted by Jeff1952 on Monday, October 24, 2016 2:50 PM

Thanks Jim. No, I had already started this scene before that movie came out,so just a coincidence. I had decided to go this way because (as most model railroaders do) I was running out of real estate. Half a boat is better than none, right? Also, by using the rear "third" of the Sylvan Great Lakes Freighter in this scene at the Grain Elevevator, I could use the front two thirds elsewhere in the harbor (painted to represent another laker), just docking to load Iron Ore. That way, I got two scenes for the price of one boat (and didn't have to wrestle with a second resin boat kit!!!) If you check my Agate Bay Elevator pix from March of this year you can see the front half of the boat posed in the slip on the opposite side of the Grain Elevators.

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Posted by hardcoalcase on Monday, October 24, 2016 2:36 PM

Would I be correct in thinking that this scene was inspired by the recent movie "The Finest Hours"? Laugh

Great use of space!

Jim

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Posted by Jeff1952 on Monday, October 24, 2016 7:02 AM

Thanks Dave... someday I really have to start reading the instructions....!

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Posted by hon30critter on Sunday, October 23, 2016 10:17 PM

Jeff1952:

Jeff1952
Had planned to post here, but must confess I'm not sure how to do that.

Go to the first thread in the General Discussion category. Steven Otte has posted the instructions.

http://cs.trains.com/mrr/f/88/t/249194.aspx

Dave

 

I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!

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Posted by Jeff1952 on Sunday, October 23, 2016 9:43 PM

In case anyone is curious, I posted a couple of pix of the "nearly" finished Lake Boat taking on a load of grain at the General Mills Elevator in the Photo Galleries section. Had planned to post here, but must confess I'm not sure how to do that. My bad!!

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Posted by herrinchoker on Monday, October 17, 2016 4:52 AM

Marine Fareing Compound (Bondo), can be your friend. Have used it on multiple occasions on boats that I have owned. Worked well.

herrinchoker

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Posted by hardcoalcase on Saturday, October 15, 2016 10:58 AM

Rather than mess with fixing a kit, why not scratchbuild the boat?  Plans for Great Lakes Freighters (and anything else) are readily available and cheap.  A print shop can re-size the drawings to your scale to avoid all the conversion calculations. 

The hull is basically a box with a pointed bow, simple to build especially if you are making a waterline model.  Sheet balsa over bass wood or aircraft ply bulkheads will do the trick, coat with fibreglas resin and sand smooth for a metal look.  The stern is more complex so use blocks of shaped balsa. 

Jim

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Posted by zstripe on Saturday, October 15, 2016 7:57 AM

chutton01

 

 
zstripe
A tip from a Guy that knows.....Anytime You have gaps and seams not correct on any plastic model, epoxy resin, especially Polyurethane resin, which is what the Sylvan kits are made out of.....do not try to fill the gaps with ACC/CA, You're wasting Your time and could make a mess out of it...I recommend using Squadron White Putty, sandable, paintable, and drys fairly quick and can be used on any type of plastic or resin, with a lot better results.

 

I have used Squadron putty a lot (and even more so Tamiya putty, when I remember to buy some), so I agree with using putty - but don't dismiss the CA yet. CA alone, meh, even with accelator not that great a gap filler...but CA + Baking soda does a really good job. That combo dries hard (in fact, if you wait too long it's rather hard to sand/file), but really good gap filler.

 

 

I have used many ways to fill gaps/gouges in all kinds of models, CA baking soda, lacquer thinner with styrene shavings, mixed together, Ambroid Pro-Weld, with styrene shavings mixed together, (You actually have more time that way) but in all the ways mentioned above....it is more work and in some cases, hit or miss, can't sand, etc. etc. The simplest, easiest, is just to use the putty .....and that is My point. Another proven way is to use Evercoat, ever-glaze & spot putty....I use that a lot on White Metal, Pewter casting kits.....again, simple to use, easy to sand...no mixing, etc. etc.. Apply right from tube, let dry, sand, paint.

Take Care! Big Smile

Frank

BTW: Nice job on the Ship, JDL56

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Posted by JDL56 on Friday, October 14, 2016 7:40 PM

Tom Fox put two of those resin kits together to come up with his version of the Edmund Fitzgerald, which is docked beside his 18-foot long ore dock.

See more on my blog at http://cprailmmsub.blogspot.ca/2014/11/amazing-ho-scale-lake-superior-ore-dock.html 

John Longhurst, Winnipeg

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Posted by chutton01 on Friday, October 14, 2016 1:04 PM

zstripe
A tip from a Guy that knows.....Anytime You have gaps and seams not correct on any plastic model, epoxy resin, especially Polyurethane resin, which is what the Sylvan kits are made out of.....do not try to fill the gaps with ACC/CA, You're wasting Your time and could make a mess out of it...I recommend using Squadron White Putty, sandable, paintable, and drys fairly quick and can be used on any type of plastic or resin, with a lot better results.

I have used Squadron putty a lot (and even more so Tamiya putty, when I remember to buy some), so I agree with using putty - but don't dismiss the CA yet. CA alone, meh, even with accelator not that great a gap filler...but CA + Baking soda does a really good job. That combo dries hard (in fact, if you wait too long it's rather hard to sand/file), but really good gap filler.

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Posted by doctorwayne on Friday, October 14, 2016 12:20 PM

ACY
I have found that the whole resin kit industry has improved by light years in the past 30 years. More recent kits are vastly superior in fit, overall detail accuracy, material, and ease of construction, when compared to those of a generation ago. I have been extremely impressed by some caboose kits by Wright Trak, for example. They certainly don't fall together by themselves. You don't shake the box and open it up to find a completed car. They take time, care, attention, work, and sometimes a bit of creativity. But the results can be well worth the effort, especially if the item isn't available in any other form short of scratchbuilding.



I can agree that many such kits have improved over the years, but most seem to have some quirks remaining - mostly methods and/or materials issues, where ingenuity or just common sense can remedy problems.    It almost seems as if built-problems should be included on the parts list, as they come with pretty-well every kit.  Stick out tongue
I think that the nicest-to-build resin kit I've built was the Speedwitch kit for Soo Line's "sawtooth" boxcar.  Wright Trak's body casting for the SAL ventilated boxcar was nicely detailed (despite an error in one grabiron bolt placement), but I pretty-well ignored the assembly instructions and methods and got what I consider to be very good results.  The decals, by the way, were excellent.

As for building a laker, it seems to me that most of it could be easily done in styrene, at both a cheaper cost and in a manner that the work would be more pleasant to do and more satisfying when completed.  Styrene is readily available in 4'x8' sheets, and is easy to cut with a utility knife.  Solvent-type cement is readily available and fast-acting, too.  The only real difficulty I see would be the stern, with its compound curves, and I'm sure that, were a person interested in building such a model, that could be figured out, too.  I do enjoy figuring out compound curves, but not on boats. Devil

Wayne

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Posted by zstripe on Thursday, October 13, 2016 6:37 AM

A tip from a Guy that knows.....Anytime You have gaps and seams not correct on any plastic model, epoxy resin, especially Polyurethane resin, which is what the Sylvan kits are made out of.....do not try to fill the gaps with ACC/CA, You're wasting Your time and could make a mess out of it...I recommend using Squadron White Putty, sandable, paintable, and drys fairly quick and can be used on any type of plastic or resin, with a lot better results. I have done so on many of Sylvan Vehicle kits and ship models and many other type kits and You can't even tell it has been patched or filled. It does help if You have any experience with Auto body work, but it is possible for anyone to learn, that is if they choose to.

https://www.amazon.com/Squadron-White-Putty-Carded/dp/B017PD1T3Q/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1476357784&sr=8-3&keywords=white+putty+squadron

Take Care! Big Smile

Frank

EDIT: I also use and it can be used on white metal and pewter casting kits.

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Posted by ACY Tom on Wednesday, October 12, 2016 9:43 AM

I've never built a Lake Boat & don't expect that I ever will in the future. However, the comments about resin kits "resin-ated" with me. I've built quite a few over the years, and agree that the quality varies widely. In the very early years, some of the early resin material was extremely unforgiving.  Some of the early Westerfield kits used a resin material that was about as delicate and breakage-prone as potato chips! I only succeded in building one of those car kits & still have some others on the shelf that will never be built. Sometimes I raid those kit boxes to get grab irons, plastic brake components, etc. for other projects. Fortunately, Westerfield and others quickly realized the old material just wouldn't do, and more recent kits use a much higher quality resin material that is much easier to work with. 

A big part of the problem has to do with the pattern work, which can vary a lot, depending on the pattern maker. If the patterns aren't carefully made, the resultant parts won't fit. Some of the cars designed by really fine pattern makers like Frank Hodina and Randy Anderson (among others) are true works of art. Take a look at the Westerfield PRR X23 boxcar, with patterns by Randy Anderson and Byron Rose, and you'll see what I mean. The Sunshine MILW rib side boxcar (out of production) also had patterns by Randy and probably has the most accurate ribs on any MILW rib side model ever produced by anybody in any scale.

Some kit manufacrturers like F&C and Westerfield have been in business many years, and their products have improved over time. Some items were designed & had patterns made a long time ago, and those older patterns may not be quite as good as those used on some of the newer offerings. In some cases, F&C obtained early patterns from other manufacturers and still have those in their line. But F&C also has much newer items that are of higher quality. I certainly don't suggest F&C should stop offering those older items just because they aren't perfect, because if they discontinued them we wouldn't have those products at all. Sometimes an imperfect product is better than none at all. 

Shrinkage of the kit parts has also been an occasional problem in the past, resulting in poor alignment of parts. This is much less of a problem today.

I have found that the whole resin kit industry has improved by light years in the past 30 years. More recent kits are vastly superior in fit, overall detail accuracy, material, and ease of construction, when compared to those of a generation ago. I have been extremely impressed by some caboose kits by Wright Trak, for example.

They certainly don't fall together by themselves. You don't shake the box and open it up to find a completed car. They take time, care, attention, work, and sometimes a bit of creativity. But the results can be well worth the effort, especially if the item isn't available in any other form short of scratchbuilding.

Tom

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Posted by hon30critter on Wednesday, October 12, 2016 12:24 AM

Hi Jeff:

I'm looking forward to seeing your pictures!

Dave

I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!

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Posted by Jeff1952 on Wednesday, October 12, 2016 12:13 AM

A progress report. I have actually nearly finished the "stern" portion of my Laker....finally. I have two slips on the north end of my layout, one for the Walthers Ore Dock with Iron Ore loading, and a second further along the "harbor" for Grain Loading. Rather than purchase (and wrestle) with TWO Resin Laker kits I decided to use the stern portion alongside an abbreviated grain loading facility and use the front two-thirds of the ship kit alongside the ore dock as if just preparing to dock. We have discussed the shortcomings of resin kits at length. Just thought I would pass along a few of the solutions I used.

  Once I became accustomed to the need to sand/file/scrape virtually every single piece I began to make some progress. I already mentioned back in this thread about the struggles I went through to get the stern main deck to fit the shape of the hull at the rear (filled the gaps with baking soda and super-glue). But there was NO way I could get the crew cabin to fit the hole provided on the stern main deck. The hole for the crew cabin was just too large (or the cabin casting too small). I finally ended up making a paper pattern of the stern main deck, then used that to cut a piece of .040 styrene sheet to cover the entire hole. I beveled the edges of the styrene with sanding until it could pass for a seam in the decking. Problem solved!  

The instructions suggest bending the supplied wire into the shape of lifeboat davits. SERIOUSLY???? I replaced those with white-metal davit castings from Sea Port Model Works. I also replaced the kit-supplied brass handrail stanchions and wire with Central Valley Steel pipe fencing...MUCH easier to manage. I did spend a LOT of time with a pin vise drilling holes for all the vertical supports, but it looks pretty decent. The kit bollards were also replaced with metal castings from Frenchman River Models. The steps and handrails were replaced with Central Valley Steel Pipe railings and steps.

The issue of the missing smoke-stack which was also discussed at length earlier was finally solved quite by accident. I stumbled across a set of earbuds my daughter had given me, packaged in a plastic tube, similar to a cigar tube. It was THE perfect size. Only had to use a razor saw at each end and was good to go. The stack top was stolen from a Lindbergh Tug Boat kit I had purchased back when I was contemplating scratch-building my Lake boat. I cut/sanded it to fit the round, smoke-stack shape, then capped it with a short length of 1/4 plastruct tube. Four life-rings were salvaged from a Kibri Riverboat, and a life-raft from the tugboat kit also, all painted Great Northern Orange. 

I'll add some pix next week when I've had a chance to do some weathering with Pan Pastels and colored pencils. It looks a little too "plain" right now....

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Posted by Eric White on Wednesday, February 17, 2016 9:14 AM

One thing to keep in mind when building resin kits is the dust is more toxic than that produced by sanding styrene, so wearing some sort of protection is a good idea. Especially with the volume of dust that could be produced building a ship model.

Eric

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Posted by cats think well of me on Tuesday, February 16, 2016 9:22 PM
I picked up four F&C kits at Timonium this month. Two Butterdish cars, an NACX flatcar with milk tanks, and a B&O C15. I've done at least a little bit on all of them, but do find just cleaning the flash alone gets tedious and takes a lot of time. Using sanding sticks and a lot of X-Acto blades definitely helps. One of the Butterdish cars is mostly together, I am just waiting on aftermarket parts before finishing the models. I admit I've rather enjoyed the extra work over building other models, though I'll be thrilled to see them finished.
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Posted by wickman on Saturday, February 13, 2016 8:08 AM

This is going to be nice. How  are you going to paint the freighter?

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Posted by zstripe on Saturday, February 13, 2016 4:53 AM

I personally would skip the PVC, roll Your own or any Styrene/Plastic tube and look into an alternative like Brass or Copper pipe/tube....I have used it before on wood ship models.

An example: Comes in different sizes. CA or epoxy in place...have used both.

http://www.homedepot.com/p/Mueller-Streamline-1-2-in-x-5-ft-Copper-Type-M-Pipe-MH04005/100558487

Take Care! Big Smile

Frank 

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Posted by gmpullman on Friday, February 12, 2016 7:30 PM

Jeff1952
Has anybody ever actually seen one of these kits finished? 

If you Google "Sylvan great lakes ore boat" / images you will find a few.

I would skip the 1/2" pvc conduit and maybe roll your own using styrene sheet wrapped around a dowel. Paging through my book, Cargo Carriers of the Great Lakes, I have not found a photo showing a stack that is not elliptical, or rectangular on the newer ships.

To me, a smoke unit looks like a cigarette burning in an ashtray... and they stink! Ick! Good idea to skip that!

Regards, Ed

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Posted by MalcyMalc on Friday, February 12, 2016 8:53 AM

Jeff1952

The fit, the gaps, the flash...all HORRIBLE!!  

And yet we accept that as normal with DPM kits - "as part of our outdated production processes we produce and sell kits that don't actually fit together unless you spend an hour or more sanding the walls (we know you thought you were buying a nice relaxing modelling experience but we figured you need an upper body workout before you get to that point)...at which time most of you will still have gaps of only a millimetre or so and have some areas that need filling because we designed the moulds that way"

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Posted by dehusman on Friday, February 12, 2016 8:10 AM

Unfortunately in my era, resin kits are about all there is.  The quality can vary wildly.  I've had castings warped, some not fully cured (one kit the resin caused the plastic detail parts to melt in the box), some broken, some with lots of bubbles.  After doing some casting myself, I would be concerned about really big curved castings, high degree of difficulty.

I have actually had pretty good luck with some of the Sylvan buildings, but they are way smaller with fewer parts than the boat.

Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 12, 2016 7:44 AM

I have tried my hand at a number of resin kits and I am not really thrilled by the quality you get for a lot of money. Of course, there is always the exception to the rule, but in general, resin kits seem to require a lot more cleaning and fitting work than other "plastic" kits. Resin is also a rather brittle material and you have to be very careful not to break off some of the delicate details.

No more resin kits for me, please!

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Posted by Jeff1952 on Friday, February 12, 2016 7:16 AM

Hey guys, misery loves company. At least I know I'm not the only one "less than enchanted" by my resin kit experience. Thanks for the heads-up on the PVC conduit smokestack, gmpullman. Menards is actually closer to me than Home Depot, but its all good. Depending on what I find that's close to scale or looks good, I may just saw off the boss. I had also considered fitting a "smoke generator" thru the stack from beneath the layout, but have read too many horror stories regarding them online, so I think I'll just forget that idea.

Has anybody ever actually seen one of these kits finished? 

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Posted by gmpullman on Friday, February 12, 2016 4:29 AM

Jeff1952
and the smoke stack was missing!!

Jeff,

Any building supply has smoke stack material. And cheap, too! The Home Depot near me sells it in ten foot lengths for $1.75.

At 4.25" in length you can make 28 stacks that will cost you about 6¢ each!

It is 1/2" PVC conduitConfused

And, the ID is too small to fit onto the boss anyway. I found a piece of 7/8" OD water tube that I might use however, unless you are modeling a coal burner you might want to fabricate a later stack that has a smaller discharge.

Good Luck!


 

Dave, glad to help you get "motivated" Big Smile

Regards, Ed

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Posted by hon30critter on Friday, February 12, 2016 3:49 AM

OK Ed, you have just made me feel much better about my layout progress (or lack thereof). I have only been planning my layout for 12 years!

Gotta get the darned kid out of the house and his gym equipment out of the garage! I'm seriously thinking of telling him to put his stuff in storage and buy a membership somewhere.

Dave

I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!

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Posted by gmpullman on Friday, February 12, 2016 3:40 AM

Thanks, Dave

It has been in the planning stages for some twenty years now Whistling !

Hopefully time will allow me to make some progress. I'll have to set aside another two or three weeks to build two more Huletts Big Smile

Model Railroading is FUN!

Ed

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