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I wash it with soapy water just like I do plastic sprues in styrene kits before painting.
Seems like a huge amount of work to make Unitrack not look like Unitrack. Why not just lay flex track & ballast/weather like normal and end up with a better result with less work?
OK, first attempt on a scrap piece. I obviously need to work on getting the rail web covered better, but yeah... I'm confident I can reproduce this over and over using easily available paint colors.I also hit the areas along the rail with pan pastels, but I would wait to do that after ballasting the shoulder and the thin black wash that ties everything together. Anyway, I don't hate it:It's tedious, but not difficult. And not half as frustrating as trying to ballast between those thin Unitrack ties. Hand-painting ties is infinitely easier on the workbench than on the layout!
If you're modeling the steam era, you could simply paint the track and ballast a flat gray cinder color.https://d28lcup14p4e72.cloudfront.net/259338/7371767/b%25201280.jpghttps://forum.mrhmag.com/post/steam-modeling-has-come-of-age-12210238
Unitrack is a wonderful product. Without it, TTRAK would be impossible. This is because of the magic of the Unijoiner. Unijoiners are the proprietary rail joiners that Unitrack uses that provides alignment, electrical connectivity, and most importantly, positive connection, between sections of track. The Unijoiner is critical to the format because, in addition to joining tracks within a module, it is the sole method used to keep adjoining modules connected. With other modular formats, this can be accomplished with bolts or clamps, but due to the lack of clearance under TTRAK modules, there is no easy method to connect them without the integrated “snap in” feature of the Unijoiner.
Depends on the line. The Middle Division had lighter colored ballast even in the last years of the steam era, with a deep cinder shoulder (which I plan to add). But for yard tracks and sidings, I do plan to use exclusively cinder.Well...1) Unitrack is kinda T-Trak's "thing," and while yes, you can use flex track in between the Unitrack end pieces (I may do this at some point), it's still the standard.2) The challenge. I kinda like making commercially available items look less commercial.No one's gonna sit here and pretend it looks like handlaid code 40. I feel like we have this discussion every time commercial N scale track comes up. But it does look a little more realistic, and for the purposes of what I'm doing, is plenty good enough.
When foreground scenery extends above or below the track level, what's the best option for fascia?Normally I'd use 1/8" Masonite, but I feel like I'd want to avoid that for something lightweight (besides, that's probably what I'll use for backdrops).Black styrene? Something else?
If you are going to use styrene - get some for sale signs from WalMart, prime and paint them .. a lot cheaper than the "hobby versions"