0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
I just took the time to go through your latest detailing efforts on your 0-6-0 Max. Quite inspiring, to say the least! I find your thought processes at least as interesting as your techniques. Thanks for the insight. I'm waiting with anticipation what you're going to do with the backhead and crew!Cheerio!Bob Gilmore
Of course, an engine with no crew doesn't make much sense unless it's just sitting idle on a yard track.
Thanks, Bob (and everyone, for such wonderful compliments!)I plan to do the backhead much like I did the one on the SP&S 4-6-2 project, using an assortment of tiny hardware bits and wire to simulate all the pipes and valve controls. The crew, I'm too sure about. I hadn't even thought about putting figures in the cab (although I have a few in some of the engines on my layout). They are always the first thing to give away the model as "just a model" in photographs. Of course, an engine with no crew doesn't make much sense unless it's just sitting idle on a yard track.
Hi Max...if you do elect to use crew, I would be honored to paint them for you. I used to be handy with a brush in my old Golden Demon figure painting days md
I think Max may be saying he's not sure he wants figures he didn't build from scratch in the cab? Otto K.
snip - How soon will we see a 3D printer, probably capable of only very small objects, with the resolution to do figures? If a printer could print a cubic millimeter sized volume to an accuracy of one micron, 0.0625 scale mm, it could do recognizable individuals in N scale. It would probably be limited to high tech micro devices at first, but eventually it would be cheap enough for our use. Imagine having yourself as the engineer!
There are several outfits printing good-quality N Scale figures. In addition to Modelu, check out 3D-Modellbau, EtchIT-Modellbau and RailNScale. Plus, new ones are appearing on Shapeways all the time--it's tough keeping up. Details on all of them at http://davidksmith.com/n-scale-figures/index.htm
This model will eventually end up in a museum.
Absolutely! And if I can make two suggestions of where:http://sdmrm.org/ (I'm biased as I'm on its library's staff)or www.craftsmanshipmuseum.com/