T O P I C R E V I E W |
jbvb |
Posted - 01/31/2008 : 8:10:46 PM I'm modeling the Boston & Maine's Eastern Route in HO standard gauge in my 207-year-old house's attic. The attic has its pluses and minuses - plenty of space, just up the stairs and finished, but the combination of the sloping ceiling and a 36" minimum radius meant I could only do an around-the-walls plan. Also, it can get a bit hot in the summer and cold in the winter.
The layout incorporates my Rowley MA modules, presently the only finished scenery, in the rural northern half of the attic. The southeast corner is where I'm building my compressed version of West Lynn, MA including the General Electric River works and the West Lynn creamery.

This photo shows the mainline curve passing the future creamery (spur under the file) and the Saugus Branch (long staging tracks) coming in from the left. I'm spiking rail on the branch, building the switch comes next. The flying plywood is actually pretty rigid with the flange below and the backdrop partially installed, it will get better when I bring the backdrop around to the left edge of the photo.
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15 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
jbvb |
Posted - 04/05/2021 : 2:11:07 PM Belated thanks, Scott. The silver cars are Rapido's models of Budd Rail Diesel Cars. After about 1955, the B&M owned more of them than any other railroad.
Also, a big hurrah for Tichy Train Group and the US Postal Service. I ordered at 10 AM Friday, Tichy shipped it First Class Saturday morning and the USPS transported it almost 800 miles, delivering it as we ate lunch Monday. |
CNE1899 |
Posted - 03/23/2021 : 09:02:20 AM James, Beautiful car builds! I like the photo work as well, particularly the one of the station and silver cars.
Scott |
jbvb |
Posted - 03/20/2021 : 10:23:07 PM Belated thanks, Mike, Bruce, Chuck and Pete. I've been scratchbuilding my first car, a PRR 'FM' 40' flat car, in brass in another thread:
http://railroad-line.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=53619
I haven't posted here since February. I'm done (I hope) with the soldering phase and spent an hour testing it on the layout tonight:

With luck I can get it finished before April; the nice weather makes it much more comfortable to airbrush with the vent pipe out the window. |
Orionvp17 |
Posted - 02/18/2021 : 11:20:16 AM The car looks good, James. Used, but not abused. Nice!
Pete in Michigan |
wvrr |
Posted - 02/18/2021 : 10:52:59 AM The car looks great, James.
Chuck |
Dutchman |
Posted - 02/18/2021 : 08:31:48 AM Nice job, James. Lime dust color for weathering - I'm going to have to remember that for oxide colored cars.
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Michael Hohn |
Posted - 02/17/2021 : 9:18:36 PM Handsome car. You did a good job building it. Weathering is realistic too.
Mike |
jbvb |
Posted - 02/15/2021 : 9:47:00 PM Thanks, Mike. Today I finished the Tichy 4028D kit, adding cut levers and air hoses and trying my first 'powder' weathering job. I used Burnt Umber pastel for the brake dust and rust down low, blackboard chalk for the ash above it and finished with a little Bragdon Lime Dust.

I plan to use this as one of 'other than scratchbuilt' models when I apply for the AP Cars certificate. It isn't be the best of the four, but I have one Merit Award and only need three more. |
Michael Hohn |
Posted - 02/13/2021 : 9:43:21 PM A couple more great shots! |
jbvb |
Posted - 02/13/2021 : 8:36:37 PM Thanks, Bruce, but the Franklin St. above was taken with my Pentax Kr DSLR (with some buildings removed to place it). It's fun to see views I hadn't even considered when the scenery and structures were designed and built. However, the $70 webcam is at its limits:

This is more or less the same shot with the C615. Lacking a real aperture, I can't do much with depth of field. Better software might get cleaner edges in the image, but the horizontal lines seem more like a sensor artifact.

This is the C615's sweet spot: Normal light, not a lot of pressure on the limited depth of field, and a perspective like I was standing on a baggage cart out at the end of the inbound platform. I'll use it to 'scout locations' and check things I was using an inspection mirror for. And I'll keep my ear to the ground for better tech; if I knew I'd get DSLR functionality in a package this size, I'd pay a DSLR price. |
Dutchman |
Posted - 02/13/2021 : 08:37:47 AM James, please keep experimenting with that webcam, I'm enjoying those pictures. |
jbvb |
Posted - 02/12/2021 : 11:24:20 PM Thanks, Jim. Earlier this week I finished paving Franklin St. and Maxwell Sq. and got the street partly detailed.

I didn't notice the stink bug on the backdrop till I was working on the picture. The scene can't be finished till I find the brick sheet for Batterman Press .
I also got in some work on a punchlist item for AP Structures. I'm thinking how I might get a real-looking brick sidewalk with .020 plastic brick sheet. But I find myself wondering if I could do the irregular surface (at least here where the ground freezes) better with paper texture on a deliberately uneven Wood Putty base. Any experiences worth passing on? |
BurleyJim |
Posted - 02/11/2021 : 12:02:36 AM Those pictures look pretty darn good in Indiana. 
Jim
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jbvb |
Posted - 02/10/2021 : 8:05:30 PM Thanks, Pete, Mike and Mike. I spent all day (except for shoveling the driveway before breakfast) working on my Structures AP paperwork. I'm not going to post a picture of a binder, but the punch list has only 3 items to be done before I email my AP Chair. |
Tyson Rayles |
Posted - 02/10/2021 : 10:53:26 AM
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