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Tomhas it very close to "right" and I'm willing to compromise a little. Checked by using posted image and scaled it by the wheel to get a known dimension. Found a Tom Fassett photo of a C50-9 on espee.raifan.net and overlaid it to the modified MT model. Scaled that photo by wheel dimension to make it all equal. I am cetrain that the photo angle and other factors make this all less than scentific but we are dealing with a 1:160 representation here. I found that scaling the prototype photo to 105% the major lines all come together vertically. At the same time you have to scale to 94% to get the horizontals to match up. I would be willing to wager that the copier used at some point was not all that accurate and the deminstions got warped. Not perfect perhaps but certainly way more accurate than anything out there today...Vertical dimensions line up at 105% proto photo enlargementhttp://www.technologywrangler.com/images/MannSPcaboose.pdf
This one basically settled it for me...
The twenty+ other photos I found that showed otherwise settled it for me...
Jason, it doesn't matter if there are one thousand and twenty photos that show a different end configuration. There is documented proof that the ends of the FVM boxcar are prototypical.
There is documented proof that the ends of the FVM boxcar are prototypical.
Quote from: bbussey on June 16, 2009, 09:10:07 AMJason, it doesn't matter if there are one thousand and twenty photos that show a different end configuration. There is documented proof that the ends of the FVM boxcar are prototypical.It's one photo taken at a certain angle and certain lighting conditions that hides the angles and fillets... whereas the miriad of other photos taken at different angles and varying lighting conditions show them.
Personally, I find that if you have a layout with track on it that you have to maintain so you can operate the numerous engines that you spend time putting decoders in and details on, and in some cases painting, and you have scenes with buildings and landscaping, and benchwork to build and vehicles to arrange and lighting to worry about...You tend to be a little more flexible with what you run on it. You probably also get invited to more parties.If you prefer to sit hunched over a table with your optivisor and calipers and a list of things that offend you, then you have bigger issues than whether or not your fillets are angled...Go outside. Chase a butterfly. Watch a TV show... Do something, ANYTHINGLee
Personally, I find that if you have a layout with track on it that you have to maintain so you can operate the numerous engines that you spend time putting decoders in and details on, and in some cases painting, and you have scenes with buildings and landscaping, and benchwork to build and vehicles to arrange and lighting to worry about...You tend to be a little more flexible with what you run on it. You probably also get invited to more parties.If you prefer to sit hunched over a table with your optivisor and calipers and a list of things that offend you, then you have bigger issues than whether or not your fillets are angled...Go outside. Chase a butterfly. Watch a TV show... Do something, ANYTHING.Lee
Anyway, back to the caboose.
So I decided to lower it even more<snip>I also made the toolbox shorter.Underframe work: