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Fabulous, you should sell these after making a machine that will build them for you. Don't forget some 4'x10' stacks
Really nice effect! Thanks for the development and "how-to" posts. I will probably use this technique to make the lumber for my saw mill, although without the bands, because my era is early 1950s.
Tutorial on depicting N scale knots? Now I've heard everything!
Would they not look like a wood knot I would not bother.
I will probably use this technique to make the lumber for my saw mill, although without the bands, because my era is early 1950s.
@narrowminded - I'm unsure of your era but keep in mind that currently American Lumber Standards unit sizes are typically 24" high x 48" wide which allows for two "units" or packages side by side on a truck bed and stacked to limit height to 14' overall.Package banding was always metal and started being nearly universal around 1960 where plastic banding has only gained traction since the late 1990's.
According to Kalmbach's "Guide to Industries Along the Tracks 4" chapter on lumber: "Railcars and Loading. From the 1800s through the mid-1900s, boxcars were the common method of carrying cut lumber. Loading and unloading was done board by board." (p67) From what little I remember of lumber yards when I was a kid in the 1950s, there were rails coming into the yards and the racks on both sides had lumber sorted by sizes in neat stacks, but nothing was tied together with bands or showed marks from bands. I sort of remember later, maybe in the late 1950s or early 1960s, seeing lumber in banded stacks and noting that those steel bands were cutting into the wood on the outside surfaces of the stacks, particularly in the corner locations, and feeling that it was somehow a cheapening of the process.