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Thanks for the Hydrospan link. It seems a better way to do things than Hydroshrink. They recommend urethane molds, but I note you are using Alumilite. Will other clay or putty work?
Wow! Just when I thought that Jason's last model was the tops, he comes out with yet another masterpiece! You Sir in my book deserve a "most prolific N scale steam loco builder" title. Seriously!Then of course Max easily earns "2nd most prolific N scale steam loco builder" title. I'm a also trying to figure out whether your builds should be called scratchbuilds or kitbashes. That is a tough one! I would lean towards "scratchbuilt", since so many parts of your models are scratchbuilt.
Day 1 ...........Lots more work to go!
First step get rid of the clutter and reduce the side of the frame. Many people with question reducing the frame size since the Life Like Mallet is know for poor pulling. However, much of the weight will be regained if not increased with tungsten.Simplified frame and reduced diameter to accept the smaller boiler of the Bull Moose.Richie, I also bought a Sunset Brass HO scale Bull Moose. I find an HO brass model to be a very useful tool for sizing and getting the right proportions of a boiler. Jason SmithTomball Locomotive Works
Oh no I don't! It takes me forever to build one engine. I build one in the time Jason builds 10.Honestly, Jason, I don't know how you do it. It would take me weeks to complete what you have already done in 1 or 2 days on this thing. I need to go research the Bull Moose and follow along.
As for the kitbash vs scratchbuilt question, I struggle with that all the time, for Jason's, my own, and many other engines.There are so many modifications and handmade parts that it seems unfair to call it a "kitbash". When I think of"kitbash", I imagine somebody sawing up a few pieces of a shell or a structure, putting them together, and thenmaybe tacking on a few details. These projects are way more involved than that. FYI, the NMRA loco judging sheet doesn't classify it that way. They break it out asscratchbuilt - complete, scratchbuilt -partial, modified commercial, kitbash, kitbuilt, and modified ready-to-run.Those make a lot more sense to me. To be called scratchbuilt-complete, the engine has to be a greater than 90%scratchbuilt structure + details. I'm afraid as long as the mechanism and drivers are commercial, these (and mine) will always be called"scratchbuilt - partial".I know that doesn't bother me, and I doubt it bothers Jason when he watches another one of his beautifulprojects gliding around his layout.