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On my monitor, and my iPad, it looks like a Neopolitan Icecream bar, as if it has stripes. Right at the top of the bearing, it turns from rust to a thin almost whiteish stripe to an almost armor drab olive color.Anyone else?
This afternoon, I finished painting the "Shapeways" concrete tie loads, I primed them last night. And finished decaling the cars that I had already painted.Close up of one of the cars..Jerry G.
Iowa and Wisconsin call them traffic circles.No matter the name, they're a real blast to negotiate with a full size semi tractor and 53' trailer.
@fcnrwy23 do you have prototype photos? And whose flatcar did you start with - those look really good..
Also built a D&RGW-style coal shed from a Wolf Models kit.
No, the sheen, color and texture all look great. It is theose wimpy springs which scream "model train!" To me that in one of those small details which makes or breaks model's realism. I also realize that if those springs were made from thicker wire (to make them true to scale) they would be way too stiff for true sprung-suspension. But is spring suspension really needed? N scale models work just fine with stiff trucks.
I got a texture that I'm happy with on this 1:29 scale truck:Do you think it has too much of a sheen?
The Railwire is not your personal army.
The issue with the springs isn't as much the fineness of the springs themselves, its more the fact that a prototype truck would have 3 rows of springs filling in the space behind. The springs are fine, but what stands out more is the open space behind them.
Here is a nice model representation of a similar truck. The springs use thicker wire and have fewer coils. This gives them the right look.On s truck the wheel faces are inaccurate and flanges are large, but it is the springs that caught first caught my eye.
I admitted the springs are fine, however the issue and the reason the exactrail example looks so much better is the light shining through where there should be more rows of springs. Even if the springs on the 1:29 example were perfectly sized there would still be light shining through and it would still look "wrong"And to make a proper comparison here's a photo of a prototype truck rather then relying on a model http://tonysissons.zenfolio.com/img/s/v-3/p204460493-3.jpgAs I admitted the truck springs on the 1:29 model are fine. I however think that filling the space behind them will improve the appearance considerably.