Rainbows in the Lehigh Valley Gorge
Thanks Tom!

Took some of those harvested shrub armatures (after I figured out where I squirreled them away...) and adhered some ground foam to them before inserting them under the conveyor and it's support structure.  I'm running out of Gorilla spray glue, so before I get to trees, I'll have to buy a new can.  


   
Check out my "Rainbows in the Gorge" website: http://morristhemoosetm.wixsite.com/rainbows
Reply
Added some trees and other ground covers near the conveyor/ground interface over the last few days.  Into the home stretch of the scenery between track and backdrop for my viewing level, which has been a goal of mine for quite a while.  

I have to work on the rockface in the picture, it's pretty close to the tracks, so I'll have to be a little careful about what I put there.

   
Check out my "Rainbows in the Gorge" website: http://morristhemoosetm.wixsite.com/rainbows
Reply
Looking good.
Tom
Silence is golden but Duct tape is silver
Ridley Keystone & Mountain Railroad
My Rail Images Gallery
Reply
I love that little dump truck
————————————————————————————
Modeling the East Broad Top as it was between 1937-1942
~Amanda
Reply
Progress continues...

Added some "tooth" to the nearly vertical slope between the tracks and the top of the hill where the conveyor heads underground.  More shrubbery and small trees to follow, but we're in the home stretch here.  This is the opposite angle of most of my previous shots headed back toward the breaker.

   
Check out my "Rainbows in the Gorge" website: http://morristhemoosetm.wixsite.com/rainbows
Reply
I polished off the scenery on this rock face - makes the area around the steam plant look really bereft of scenic details, so I'm going to have to add some industrial elements in and around that area, and all of that stuff can be added as I get it.  I'm off between Christmas and New Year's, so I think I'll be able to devote a good bit of some of that time to ballasting track.

   

I'm also getting tired of seeing a brown sky in the background of these pictures in this direction.  I think it's time to add a piece of backdrop behind the breaker, which may lead me to some ideas to finish the town of Hazleton over in that corner of my layout.
Check out my "Rainbows in the Gorge" website: http://morristhemoosetm.wixsite.com/rainbows
Reply
Amazing how adding scenery in one place can make the rest seem doubly bare. Great work, though, too! I always enjoy seeing updates to your layout.
————————————————————————————
Modeling the East Broad Top as it was between 1937-1942
~Amanda
Reply
Thanks Amanda!  You're spot on - details (or lack thereof) make the scene.

Backdrop behind the breaker is now in.  It's a piece of 1/4" Homasote painted blue with the upper section given some brush treatments of white while the blue paint is still wet to give a lighter color as you get higher in the sky.  Here are a couple of shots.

   

   

I'm also making some steady progress on my Reading GP40-2 which I hope to have weathered and running by the end of the weekend.  Pictures of that coming soon.  I'll also be weathering and patching some Conrail/Reading boxcars if I get enough free time.
Check out my "Rainbows in the Gorge" website: http://morristhemoosetm.wixsite.com/rainbows
Reply
Nice job on the backdrop.
Tom
Silence is golden but Duct tape is silver
Ridley Keystone & Mountain Railroad
My Rail Images Gallery
Reply
Thanks Tom!  Nothing like a blue sky to make things look like they make sense.

Got coal on the brain these days.  I've been pondering coal loads for a number of my empty hopper cars - I could run them all empty, but I like them better when there's a simulated load.

Some of them came with simulated loads, others did not.  What to do about the ones without?  I'd thought about going the purchase route, but once again, the cheapo in me didn't like that option.  Why does one load cost almost $10?  It's a piece of formed plastic, and if you really want to make that thing look good, you have to glue coal dust on top of it.

There's a guy on YouTube who makes them out of basswood with a foam top sprinkled with coal dust.  I was on my way to procure materials to do the same when I talked to one of our techs downstairs with a 3D printer.  After a few minutes of searching (there are a lot of people publishing files to create a lot of stuff in the Thingiverse) we found some 3D prints that would work for at least my 100-ton cars, so he's been printing me some of those in his spare time.  I paid him $10 and he's going to build me at least 10.  He also said he could scan in some of my delivered simulated loads from Bowser, etc. and then print out the duplicated load.  I like this solution!

I have the first three.  Right off the printer, they're reasonable, but require a little bit of either cutting or sanding to fit properly into a car.

   

I smother with Elmer's glue and then sprinkle with Woodland Scenics coal dust.  Wah la!

   
Check out my "Rainbows in the Gorge" website: http://morristhemoosetm.wixsite.com/rainbows
Reply
On Lostock Junction (where I operate if there's no epidemic) the owner glued steel washers to the underside of the loads so that they could be lifted out with a magnet.
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.
Reply
Saw a similar trick from the guy with the basswood and foam inserts. I'm always running full, so didn't opt for the liftout option - good tip though!
Check out my "Rainbows in the Gorge" website: http://morristhemoosetm.wixsite.com/rainbows
Reply
Todd, check this guy out on eBay:

Coal loads to fit the Bowser 100 ton hopper HO scale 3 pack

They cost $9.00 for the 3 pack. He has loads that fit various hopper sizes and types. Also some fit other cars. Such as the loads for the Atlas 2-bay hoppers fit Athearn 2-bay hoppers. The loads are made of cast resin. I believes he makes them himself. His shipping is resonable and he combines shipping. He is located in southwestern New York so shipping is usually quick.

I have bought a bunch of the loads and really like them.
Tom
Silence is golden but Duct tape is silver
Ridley Keystone & Mountain Railroad
My Rail Images Gallery
Reply
Good tip, Tom! I think I now have the 100-tonners covered with the 3D print option. If the 70-ton scan doesn't work, I'll be thinking about other options.
Check out my "Rainbows in the Gorge" website: http://morristhemoosetm.wixsite.com/rainbows
Reply
"Details....details...."

The only guy older than me in our division uses that phrase fairly often - mostly when we don't know how we're going to pull a rabbit from a hat.

In the case of the area around the coal breaker, I'm hunting down some details (industrial, junk, people, vehicles, and other knick-knackery to give the feel that there's still a lot going on in the area.  The recent "Party boat" and "Santa's Workshop" threads reminded me that the the bottom of my box of railroad stuff are some Inter-Action Hobbies kits that I bought last winter and include Telephone booths, Coke and Ice machines.  Perfect!  It's time to get to work.  While I'm at it, I can also put together the free "Christmas Tree Farm Shack" kit.  It's a good diversion from my recent glut of DCC installs and boxcar mods.  Variety is the spice of life!


   
Check out my "Rainbows in the Gorge" website: http://morristhemoosetm.wixsite.com/rainbows
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)