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...more disturbing in that DKS photo is the lintels above the windows and how they are represented.
Well, How big are they really? Can you measure them? My old house in PA had really big cut stone rectangular blocks in the foundation,and I'd say they were about 12" high by 18" wide. There were some other buildings in town with large blocks like that.If yours are bigger than that, my instinct would say they are too large.
On this building, the foundation blocks are approx. 14" high by 26" wide. The bricks are over a foot wide.Then there's that "shelf" over the foundation... And I question whether such a small, nondescript brick structure would have such a foundation in the first place.This is more like it:This. The lintels are a complete joke. This is what they were shooting for--and completely missed:BTW, this building has what I think is supposed to be a wood shake roof, but looks more like thatching...In the same way some modelers fret over how many louvers are on a GP7 hood, I get picky about building details.
I assume they made the floor of the freight house the height of the freight car doors by using dirt fill inside those block walls, then poured the concrete floor over that.
Yes. I have nearly all of these "kits," and I'd gladly fill roofwalk and headlight holes rather than the dozens of gaping craters in these (what are laughingly called) "brick" walls. If you've tried doing both, you'd understand; carbody holes are nearly always on smooth surfaces, and they're comparatively small in size and number. Filling larger holes surrounded by texture--which must be matched--is not a trivial task. ...
For what you get, they're just too much work
It's one thing to buy something cheap as a fixer-upper, but these aren't cheap.
Now before someone else chimes in to defend WS (like we are the bullies of the playground picking on the handicapped kid), let's bear in mind that our lament (at least as manufacturers) is that WS (as a fairly major model company) with resources we can only dream about, goes after the ready-to-use market and passes on the potential to make truly great models. It makes me wonder if there are any modelers still working there. Looking at Chris and David's close-up shots make me wonder.
$70 ??? I had no idea. Forget it. My "ripoff" meter just pegged. I thought these were more like $20.