I tried scratchbuilding some telephone poles. The large transmission poles use beads for the suspension insulators. The beads are a little large for the smaller poles. I tried different methods, but what seems to work best is cutting off the plastic insulators from a "decommissioned" Bachmann pole. The hardest part is gluing the tiny insulators on.
Now that's impressive. I have a large bag of small black beads and wondered what I could do with them. I've not planted any poles on my layout yet, but when I do, this is the way to go.
Don (ezdays) Day
Board administrator and
founder of the CANYON STATE RAILROAD
Thanks! :-P Tyson, I plan to eventually wire them with E-Z Line from Berkshire Junction. That, of course, depends on two things.
1. How good a job I did gluing on the insulators, if they'll hold the wire, and more importantly
2. When I can settle on a place to put them. I have a bad habit of moving things around.
I experimented a bit with little bottles of paint that are supposedly for putting drops of colour on cloth. Some of them are transparent and look like glass. The bottle is squeezable and it's a little tricky getting the right size drop.
Then the pole is hung upside-down until it sets.
There's a picture of my attempt on a couple of O gauge poles. On one of the Gauges. Somewhere.
David Moderato ma non troppo
Perth & Exeter Railway Company
Esquesing & Chinguacousy Radial Railway In model railroading, there are between six and two hundred ways of performing a given task.
Most modellers can get two of them to work.
More poles. I tried gluing some green insulators on the old Bachmann pole that donated its insulators for the first picture. It doesn't show in the picture, but you do get the see-through effect.