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Google "Chicago Tunnel Company" or "Chicago Tunnel System" and you'll get some good pictures under images.The motors were very much like the standard ones sold to mining companies. I don't know enough about the technical side of their motive power to say if they had customized designs.Some of the cars were built by the Bettendorf Company with scaled down trucks and couplers that looked like their standard gauge counterparts.Charlie Vlk
Is that really from their advertisements?
I'm 3 prints in with the Mechanagon 3D Gray resin. Only bought it because Anycubic Gray was out of stock, and with a coupon it was 20$ for a half liter on Amazon! I also got some Monoprice Rapid Gray for later.The Mechanagon 3D Gray is quite noticeably the least viscous of all I've worked with, and as such, I've had to bump normal time up to 22. If Anycubic Transparent Green is like syrup, I'd put Anycubic White at melted ice cream, with Anycubic Gray only slightly thicker. This Mechanagon Gray is almost like a heavy motor oil.I used my Anycubic Gray settings (N18) on the first print with Mech. Gray, which resulted in about 40% of the parts choosing to stay with the FEP instead of their supports. Those that did print revealed a noticeable improvement on detail in holes and rivets! This supports my hypotheses that less viscosity in the resin has at least some correlation to improved detail.We'll see what happens when I reprint those parts at N22, or N20.
@narrowminded, I did not mean to be not critical of your part, just wondering aloud if the viscosity was part of the reason for the ballooning (see below) not necessarily the sharp edges.
Did you prime the coupler too?
With the platform attached you couldn't see much as the 2 boxcars are about 3/16" from each other.