Thanks, guys.
Peter: I like the Bullfrogs quite a bit.
Very well designed, study, throws handlaid turnouts, includes a switch to power the frog, relatively inexpensive ($5 each in bulk pack).
Need to factor in the hour it takes to assemble 4-5 as well.
Some dudes in our Free-moN anarcho-collective use Blue Points and they look nice, easy to install.
But at least twice the price.
So the ol' time vs money thing again.
Phil: glad you dig the beginnings of the trestles.
The bamboo skewers work fine.
They just don't take stain the same as "the rest" of the stripwood.
I used them for an earlier trestle as well:
And you can see how light they showed up compared to some other wood.
Since I got razzed on that one for how light it was, I went uber-dark on this one.
Dipped the bents directly into the India Ink.
Worked out okie dokie, especially when I touch up with some white paint and color pencil.
You do have to plan ahead with the trestles and you can't get the track laid as quick and run trains like normal
Alrighty!
Laid down the track and soldered the rails to the pc board ties on the trestle deck:
Laided down the caulk then started at one end soldering the rails to the endplate, then used two 3-point gauges to hold the rails while soldering along the trestle deck.
Not the most accurate job (turns out I installed the trestles a wee bit too "inside" the curve) but worked out fine.
NOTE TO SELF #513: Gap the PC board ties BEFORE installing onto the bridge deck!!!
This is probably the 7.5th time I've glued the pc board ties in and THEN remembered I should have gapped them ahead of time to avoid nicking the neighboring wood ties.
D'oh!
Before I've spraypainted the rails before soldering them onto a deck, but this time I tried Neo-Lubing the rails with a microbrush afterwards:
Turned out ok and stained.
We'll see how it holds up.
I painted the pc board ties with Floquil Grimy Black, which matched pretty well.
This morning (midday?) I had to glue in the water-side plants, as I couldn't pour the "big pour" of Magic Water until they were in and the glue cured:
Yes, the tufts look uberGREEN.
Will mellow out after all the scenery is in (and the first layer of dust settles
)
No, I'm going to use a toothbrush to rub dirt into everything: mutes the harshness and ties everything together.
But need to wait for things to dry.
(So will probably happen at the show or after)
The brush is touching the grasstops with whiteglue so I can sprinkle some AMSI ground foam
http://amsistuff.com/ on top to make miner's lettuce and other small leafy plants that blanket the grounds around water sources.
Just sprinkle it on a little heavy, wait 15 minutes or so, and then vacuum up the excess.
Spraybombing the track after scenery takes more blue tape and paper towels, but do-able:
And this is why you do the final water pour LAST:
All the scenery stuff gets sucked onto the semi-sticky surface.
Good thing this is just the initial layer to coat the bottom and plug the holes.
Also started experimenting with weathering the stained bents:
Had good luck on other wood projects using a white color pencil, and it seems to be alrighty here, though I probably should have thrown it on before I glued all the bents together.
Might also try a white paint wash or dry brushing here or there.
But that can happen after the show.
Also ballasted the track, with a cinders layer under the mixed grey topping:
Still need a bunch o' bushes and a few low trees.
Thought about making an abandoned fishing hut on piles decaying into the wetland here but will save for after the show.
When all scenery and ballasting reached the "meh" level of acceptability (and when it was certain the SF Giants had blown another game before the 7th), I went ahead and mixed up a big batch of tinted Magic Water and poured a healthy amount into each waterway:
I use a old brush trimmed short to push and pull the water into place.
Part of the fun of Magic Water is that it really doesn't set until the next day, so you really have to make sure that your module is FLAT.
In fact, I usually pour only half of the concoction first and carefully observe if there's any "flow" in one direction or another.
In both of the photos above you can see shims of various materials (the bent jig, a metal plate, a piece of stripwood, etc.) positioned to counted the uneven waterway surface.
20-30 minutes after pouring, I go back and check to see if there was any slow slide to one side or another.
But I intentionally left the sides high, so worse comes to worse there's a shallow patch somewhere.
Easily fixed with another pour after the show.
Many small details left to do (horizontal supports? weathering? bushes? walkways / pathes? etc.) but the track is set, wired and ready for operation, and the scenery is okie dokie for now.
Really want to work on making realistic reeds and brownish watergrass (as opposed to sticking tufts in magic water), but that will be part of the project for the next show in November.
Tomorrow is unbolting all the seats in my car and hauling most of this stuff the hours or so down to the show for setup and then trying to make it back before the Friday rushhour!
Thanks for looking.