0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Doug those HO Models look good and a F22 Should not be too hard to scratchbuild. I guess they would have still been in use around 1952 as the Korean conflict would have still been going on then. Could more than likely use a couple of Red Caboose 42 Flats and a bit of a cut and shut.RegardsAl
Looking at the photo of the two F22 flats they appear to be carrying a 16"/50 caliber Mark 7 – United States Naval Gun which was the type fitted to the Iowa Class Battle Ship. The length of the barrel for that class by what is written is about 66ft 6in. Each gun weighed about 239,000 pounds without the breech block. The Iowa Class included the USS Iowa and I believe the USS Missouri (Big Mo). Please correct me if I am wrong here but I do believe that they were the biggest battleships in the USN. While the models look impressive I am now under the impression that even the barrel is a Foibe. The only barrel I ever saw anywhere around that length was a French Shore Battery Gun barrel that had been blown off its' mount on Cape St Jacques in South Vietnam.
I'm mostly critical about ride height ...It's a 30 foot flat. It needs to ride low. I'm worried about couplers, too. Needs to be a MTL 2004 or something.
and the surface of the metal
You are right that the height of the couplers make things very difficlut to get a very low ride height. But I am trying my best to get a very low car.I will try even harder to get the metal flowing differently for a better surface on the flat car F23 - but the F22 had a wood deck - and I am planning to have a laser cut wood deck that will cover any blemishes on the top.PeterPeter HarrisN Scale Kitswww.nscalekits.com
there are at least 2 versions of F22 decks...One is just a normal deck. The other is with the bridge. Basically, theres a hole in the center of the car so the bridge can pivot.
concerned with the car sides than the deck. The deck is easy to sand. Sanding around the stake pockets-not so much.