0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.
to get the effect I would probably put some resin or glue or something like that in a syringe with a small needle, and "dot" the rail base at the center of each tie. FWIW.
Did you investigate Easitrack?
doing it to a layout that fills a 12' X 24' room might be a deal breaker.
Case in point. You and I (and others) have had in our possession for a long time Proto87 Stores frets of etched tie plates. He uses your photo as an illustration of what they look like when applied to N-scale, code 40 rails and wooden ties. However, I haven't seen any indication anywhere that anybody has used them to superdetail their code 40 trackage. For me, those etched frets won't work as they are because I've already laid my code 40 branchline trackage, so I'd have to snip the center section out of each tie plate, and apply those "ends" to the sides of my rail on every tie. The tie plates are already miniscule, and my snipping process would make what I'm having to handle, position and glue into place three times smaller. I'm still mulling it over in my head if it's worth the effort. Obviously, most everybody thinks that it isn't, and I would bet that Andy's sales go to people who see photos of the fret, then are stunned when they actually see it, hold it and realize how micro-sized these parts really are.
The above would also work for 3D prints of wood ties with tie plates and spike heads. Hmmmmm....maybe this is something to model, print up and get a baseline cost to see if it'd be financially feasible...and make them available through Shapeway's business model. Something to think about.
I always thought I was picky about track until I read your thread about milling/grinding the railheads.
I think it looks great Ed. How do you like the looks of it in person? (In my experience, pictures don't always convey a good sense of what these tiny models look like in person.)
the part that bugs me most about the ME concrete tie track is the appearance of under-rail connecters that join the ties together. Since they are grey, they tend to stand out when you're looking at the track from eye level, and adding more ballast to bury them makes the track look over-ballasted to me. Sigh. Anyway, that's another advantage of individual ties.
What are your plans going forward, Ed? Is the "tunnel" layout getting a green light now?
P.S. Your hopper looks awesomely massive on that track!
I'm not a track or tie expert (concrete or wood), but to my eyes the ME track with concrete ties looks better than the handlaid version. The handlaid version looks so plain without the rail clips. The oversized clips on the ME track, IMO, look better than no clips at all.I think that the naturally-light color of the ties really exaggerates the absence of the clips. This problem is not as prominent on handlaid wood ties. That is because the color of ties and rail is very similar. That greatly diminishes the fact that there is no hardware on handlaid wood ties. With handlaid concrete ties, the lack of hardware is highly noticeable.
Really I think the way to go is make up a tie strip in injection-molded plastic. The estimates I had on tooling and a small production run were in the $4000-$7000 ballpark. Do you know any modern-era N-scalers who would like to get in on some finescale trackwork?