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Congratulations! With that many awards, a little bragging is in order. That should put to rest, permanently, the idea that N scale isn't for scratchbuilders... How many of the larger-scale models had scratchbuilt drivers? Does RMC usually do an article on the winner of their award? I've been reading them for half a century, but have never paid much attention to how they cover convention winners. I just look at the pictures...
It wasn't reported. I didn't want to make a big show of it. But I did pretty darn well, and I'm happy. Here's the run-down:1st Place Scratchbuilt SteamThe William J Lenoir Award (a special NMRA award for scratchbuilt steam)The Railroad Model Craftsman Outstanding Modeling AwardPeople's Choice First Place - LocomotivePeople's Choice Second Place - Photo Match (I wasn't really entering for this, but they liked howwell my model matched against a similarly posed photo of the prototype).Thank you for asking.
Hahaha. How many volumes did it take total to tell the story. I see two. Or is it three?Thanks for the great picture of the awards.Great job Max.
It happened in 1989 in Houston.Tom Knapp won first place and best of show (all scales) with his scratchbuilt N scale Shay....By the way.... as cool as that shay was..... it does not even compare to what Max did.
It happened in 1989 in Houston.Tom Knapp won first place and best of show (all scales) with his scratchbuilt N scale Shay.My kitbashed U30C (made way before Kato) came in second in the N loco division.I didn't mind getting beat by the Best of Show.By the way.... as cool as that shay was..... it does not even compare to what Max did.
Not bad for a "runner's scale", to quote the late 60s/early 70s magazines. Two first place wins, and two best-in-shows, and both are for steam locomotives, probably the hardest things to scratchbuild.
Was Tom's Shay the one that was a heavily modified Atlas Shay that was re-worked with 3D parts. It was later sold as a kit?